more than likely a blowed head gasket
Nuclear, Wind, Water, Coal, Petroleum products, Solar, and Geothermal.
Petroleum jelly, also known as petrolatum, is not water-based. It is a semi-solid mixture of hydrocarbons derived from petroleum, which is a non-polar substance. Water-based products contain water as the main ingredient, whereas petroleum jelly is oil-based and does not contain any water.
Sulfur dioxide enters the water system through several mechanisms, which include volcanic activity, air pollution from burning oil and petroleum in the form of acid rain, as well as wine making and production of sulfuric acid.
condentsation
Infiltration and then percolation.
through the tube feet
The products formed by burning petroleum fuel are carbon dioxide (CO2), water vapor (H2O), and various pollutants like nitrogen oxides and particulate matter.
Water and CO2 is entered. Products are glucose and Oxygen.
If water is one of the products of a chemical reaction occurring in a system, it belongs to that system. The system is defined by the reactants and products involved in the reaction, while the surroundings refer to everything outside of that system. Therefore, since water is produced by the reaction, it is considered part of the system until it is removed or interacts with the surroundings.
Petroleum isn't a single product, but rather a range of substances. Many will float on water, but not all.
The primary markets for chemical products are paper, housing, automobiles, water treatment, fertilizer, petroleum refining, steel production, manufacturing, and soap and detergent production.
The fuel (oil, gasoline, etc) is typically trapped in an absorbent material or lying on a surface that is preventing it from burning (by sinking away heat). Petroleum products have lower densities than water, i.e. they float on top of water. When you add water, it soaks down into the materials present, which causes the fuel to float to the surface. The high temperature causes the water to boil and project bits of fuel and water droplets into the air. If it's hot enough, this will cause the fire to blaze up; otherwise it usually just spreads the fire around. Hence, fires caused by petroleum products are extinguished by solid or gas fire suppressants (sand, foam ect.) as it forms a layer over the petroleum product on fire, thereby, cutting out the oxygen supply needed for it to continue to burn.