i dont really no the answer i just thought it would be cool to type sumthing because im sittin here in my boring history class lol what a surprise
oil was used for to make gasoline to light your lamps and to run machinery!
Yes
Oil was first successfully drilled in Pennsylvania near Titusville in 1859. It had been known to exist for a long time before that so it wasn't oil that was discovered but a way to remove it from the ground.
Oil and electricity
No they did not. They held it over a fire and used the oil that came off it to make candles and other resources
Standard Oil Company
Norway is the largest oil producer and exporter in Western Europe
Western Europe produces more oil than Eastern Europe. The main oil supplier in Western Europe is the North Sea, while it's the Black Sea and the Caucasus in Eastern Europe.
The top three oil producers in Western Europe are Norway, the United Kingdom, and Denmark.
yes stupid ;)
The Western World is very dependent on oil, and account for the overwhelmingly majority of oil imports. Although some of the world's largest oil producing countries are in Europe (Norway, the United Kingdom, etc.), the majority of the oil used comes from the Middle East because this region dominates the oil market. Cutting off the trade route for oil from the Middle East to Europe would greatly damage Europe financially.
OPEC
Whale oil lamps are lamps from the 1800s that were lit with whale oil. (: Whale oil lamps are lamps from the 1800s lit by whale oil. who ever wrote that sucks
Whale oil lamps are lamps from the 1800s that were lit with whale oil. (: Whale oil lamps are lamps from the 1800s lit by whale oil. who ever wrote that sucks
Yes
Most of Western Europe's oil comes from Middle Eastern nations (Saudi Arabia, Iran, etc.). However, a lot of oil is also supplied by Russia, the United States, Canada, China, and other European nations (i.e. Norway).
coal, water, oil, natural gas, wood, earth(soil), sun
The first to use it were Chinese and Indian painters somewhere around 700 AD. In western painting, the first to adopt the technique were the early Dutch masters in the 15th century; from there the use of oil paints on wood quickly spread to most of Western Europe.