no minerals are not known to be fossil fuels
Tthey are both dug up from under the earth where they have been for millions of years. They are both non renewable, though minerals can be recycled.
The Earth's Lithosphere is the Crust and Upper Mantle. Fossil Fuels or Minerals Fuels are fossle source fuels, that is, carbon or hydrocarbons that are found on the earth's crust
No, they are organic compounds.
Biosphere
All the chemical changes are the same.
they may have because the were dino's on that island and it might have become fossil fuels
oil
Fossil fuels are produced by the decomposition of animal and vegetable matter over time
manganese, and fossil fuels
Your question should be "Are fossils like minerals?" See, a fossil is the skeleton of an animal that was compressed under ground. In the right conditions, the bones can be replaced - or filed - with minerals that leech out of the surround rocks and into the cavity left by the fossil. To answer your actual question more simply, they both come out of the ground.
Most likely because fossil fuels are not minerals. They are ultimately composed of organic matter which came from living things that died and became buried under sediment. Through a lot of time and a great amount of pressure the fossil fuels were developed. This is also why fossil fuels are considered non-renewable resources because it takes so long to make them. That's all :) JAE HERMOSA
Fertile soils, forests, fossil fuels and minerals.