You can think of petroleum deposits AS a mixture of hydrocarbons. One such mixture which we process and purify is gasoline!
Petroleum is in a liquid form. It is retrieved by drilling into the earth and then pumping it out. Oil rigs and derricks. Various means of obtaining petroleum from tar sands and shale deposits are being investigated. Tars sands are not expected to be "mined", but treated in situ to generate liquid / gaseous petroleum. Oil shale may require mining. Neither of these is currently economically viable.
monster energy drinks, they are exactly what i need to get through a tough day on a volcanic island. plus, coal petroleum doesn't taste that good.
The answer to this question would be yes, they could be found in the same geographical regions. Fossils can be found anywhere in the world, in many different forms. They can be bones that were preserved underground or imprints left in rocks that show organisms that died ages ago. Petroleum deposits may not be as commonly found throughout the world, but while it may not be found everywhere fossils are, fossils can definitely be found anywhere petroleum might be found.
the prairies are rich in petroleum and natural gas. gold,silver,copper and zinc are also found here. there are large deposits of iron ore near lake superior.coal is found along the foothills of the rocky mountains and uranium is found near lake athabasca in canada. the northen part of the prairies has large deposits of potash.
Oklahoma
You can think of petroleum deposits AS a mixture of hydrocarbons. One such mixture which we process and purify is gasoline!
No.
The US has a great deal of petroleum, and deposits are located all over the US.
Maine does not have any oil deposits-well, at least no discovered oil deposits.
Fossils, coal deposits, petroleum deposits, all of them took immense eons to form.
Only non important deposits; uranium is not mined now in Oklahoma.
Coal
deposits of coal, petroleum, and natural gas
Natural gas commonly occurs near petroleum and the Middle East has large petroleum deposits.
No, tar sand is petroleum saturated sand deposits. It is a fossil fuel source like any other source of petroleum.
Yes, most Mexican oil and gas deposits are located in the Gulf of Mexico.