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Gautier said the study focused on geological conditions in the Arctic and how they compared to other parts of the world where oil and gas have been found. Because so much of this territory is unexplored and data is so limited the researchers had to develop a new method to do assessments, Gautier said. They collected the best information they could for the region and then subdivided it into geological areas. Those areas were compared with other geological regions around the world where gas or oil have been found in order to produce their assessment of where more resources are likely to be located. Gas and oil tend to be found in sedimentary basins, he said, and "each one of these basins has a story, a geologic story." "As new data become available our understanding of the resources in the Arctic will change," he added. ___ On the Net: Science: http://www.sciencemag.org/
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