kerosene is a thin oil that was used in 1849 to light oil fuled lamps.
Only honey does not spoil.
Kerosene was used to fuel lamps and lanterns, to provide lighting in homes. Kerosene had replaced whale oil as lamp fuel, and candles for home illumination. It was several generations after the Civil War before electricity became available and accepted as a power source.
spoiled ur welcome! :)
Spare the rod, spoil the child.
it depends Kerosene does 'spoil' because bacteria will begin to break it down. Water speeds up the digestion. The process produces a plaque that will clog jets in an injector system and will produce acids that will corrode metal components in the heater. If you have large quantities of old kerosene, you can rescue it by filtering it to remove the bacterial plaque. For small quantities, it isn't worth the hassle--use it to burn out stumps. See the link for Sta-Bil, a product that can stabilize fuel.
Fossil fuel is kerosene. Of kerosene oil condensate.
When water and kerosene are mixed kerosene will float on top.
kerosene and air
Is Iodine soluble in kerosene? Is Iodine soluble in kerosene?
You get the lantern and light it with the kerosene.
The odor of kerosene is "aromatic".
Kerosene
the source of kerosene is hydrocarbon
No, kerosene is a liquid
kerosene floats on water because kerosene is less denser than water
You start it by igniting kerosene.