OIl Sands (called Tar sands by its detractors) is made up of natural deposits of sand, clay and bitumen ( this is a heavy black viscous oil) and are mined using strip mining in open pit mines or by thermal extraction using steam assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) technology. The two systems are similar except that the liberation of the oil from the sand matrix occurs on the surface with the excavation methods and underground with SAGD.
The oil is purified of all dirt and water and then upgraded on site or at a separate upgrader site. In the case of the distant upgrader, the bitumen is diluted with a conventional light oil to make it flow more easily.They generate oil similar to pumped oil but extracting the oil is more complex. er
Upgrading is done by breaking the oil molecules eith by thermal methods or by catalytic cracking. The broken molecules are still long enough to be classified as oil although some become light petroleum gases. The oil molecules are separated from each other by boilling points into various types of oil and further treated like oil from any conventional source.
Tar sands or oil sands are consist of clay, sand, water, and bitumen. Its bitumen content is extracted and separated to purify it into oil.
Tar sands, also known as oil sands or bituminous sands, consist of clay, sand, water and a form of petroleum known as bitreum. Wheatgrass is one plant which will grow in tar sands.
Tar sands, also known as oil sands, are primarily produced in Canada, with the largest reserves located in the province of Alberta. Other countries, such as Venezuela and the United States, also have smaller deposits of tar sands.
There are larger known US supplies of tar sands than petroleum.
Frederick W. Camp has written: 'The Tar sands of Alberta' -- subject(s): Oil sands 'The tar sands of Alberta, Canada'
Bituminous sands are oil sands , tar sands and more tecnically they're an unconventional petroleum deposit . I hope I hlped you!!
The Canadian Tar Sands in the Athabaska Valley of Northern Alberta are the world's largest deposit of a heavy oil called bitumen. That's the stuff that is used in asphalt on our major highways and byways. This form of oil is much more expensive to extract from the earth but, as the price of crude oil increases with the diminishing supply of world reserves, the tar sands deposits become increasingly more important as a source of energy. If we could stop using oil altogether, then the tar sands would no longer be important to our lifestyle.
Tar sands are needed for their potential to produce oil, which can be refined and used in various applications such as transportation fuels and petrochemical products. However, the extraction and processing of tar sands can have significant environmental impacts, including greenhouse gas emissions and habitat destruction. Alternative energy sources and technologies are being developed to reduce the reliance on tar sands and other fossil fuels.
they are both the same. i dont think there is a difference because in wikipedia they have the same page for both.
The Athabasca Tar Sands, also known as the Athabasca oil sands, are deposits of bitumen in Alberta, Canada. They are a major source of unconventional oil production but are controversial due to environmental concerns surrounding their extraction process, which is energy-intensive and produces high levels of greenhouse gas emissions.
coal, natural gas, oil, oil shale and tar sands, nuclear power
Canadian tar sands are being used as an energy source, but it is a lot harder, and thus more expensive, to derive oil from the tar sands than to drill it direct from the ground. At the current price of oil, however, it make economic sense to do so. The Canadian Oil Sands are the largest deposit of recoverable oil in the western hemisphere but oil needs to be above $60 a barrel for it to be economically feasible. With oil prices only being above the $60 a barrel for the last 2 years or so, companies are only now moving into develop the sands. Unfortunately, the oil discovery and extraction process for the sands is a slow capital intensive process that will require more time to be fully be online. For a look at who is developing the oil sands, you might look at http://www.canadianoilsand.org. They have a number of articles on the oil sands.