Peat. It is dug up, Chopped into blocks, and dried so it can be burned to make fuel.
Peat is used as a fuel but it comes from the wet environment of a bog. It helps if a fuel that you are trying to burn is not wet.
"Peat" is a fuel source that looks like it's just soil being dug from the ground... but it's dead grass that has grown in an area for so long that it's just more dead grass on top of other dead grass. It has been dug and dried to be used as fuel for quite a long time, but it isn't technically soil.
Coal is formed from the remains of trees and plants which grew millions of years ago. They delayed and sank into the ground, and were pressed under layers of rock and other minerals. As this vegetation dried up, it turned into peat, then into coal. The Coal is found underground in layers called seams. Mines have to be make in order to dig it out. Coal is a very useful product. Not only is it used as fuel but also in the manufacture of such things as dyes and insecticides.
No. It is never used as a fuel.
formal regions
Dried peat can be used in gardening. But it is also used as a fuel and burnt as a source of heat.
Fuel to make fires.
It has to be grown (vegetation), or collected (trash) and then dried before it is burnt.
When properly dried, it should be no more repellent than dried cow manure would be (and pioneers used those as fuel!).
Peat is used as a fuel but it comes from the wet environment of a bog. It helps if a fuel that you are trying to burn is not wet.
The partly decayed substance is vegetation bogs.
too much heat
Dried vegetation has less pliability and liquid. Therefore, when it moves, static electricity increases as friction is continuously created.
Water, fuel, vegetation
Dried rust can be used for sprinking it on cow poo.
Fuel - usually in the form of dry vegetation.
coal