You melt it down in big fires.. And then it gets shipped to manufacturers who turn it into product.
The potatoes are not the fossil fuels.But they can turn into fossil fuels once buried in soil for million years.
1. Organisms don't use fossil fuels; they make them. After they decompose, they eventually turn into fossil fuels. (oil) (if this wasn't the answer, then here is another answer.) 2. If organism meant humans, then we use fossil fuels for lots of things. For example: Plastic Gas Oil to heat homes (et cetera) I hope this helps!! :)
the burning of fossil fuels creates thermal energy, which in this case is on the from of steam, which then in turn rotates a turbine
Fossil fuels are dead animals and plants rotted into the ground and turn into turf and the like. That is what your turf is made of. It take millions of years for a bog to grow so thaqts why we have to be careful we dont use it all.
Refiners.
Fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas) are burnt to boil water. The steam under pressure spins an electricity turbine.
Fossil fuels are burned to spin a generator which in turn produces electricity.
They usually run engines that turn generators
Fossil fuels come from long dead living organisms that have been put under pressure for millions of years. The living organisms once grew and needed the Sun like every living organism to grow. Therefore, when we burn fossil fuels were turning solar energy into thermal energy.
Hydroelectric power is better than fossil fuels because it is renewable. The water cycle ensures that there will always be water flowing downstream to turn turbines. Fossil fuels take millions of years to create.
The two forces that can turn fossils into fossil fuels are heat and pressure. Over millions of years, the remains of plants and animals buried underground are subjected to high temperatures and pressures, causing them to transform into fossil fuels like coal, oil, and natural gas.
Dead plants can turn into fossil fuels like coal, oil, and natural gas through a process called fossilization. Over millions of years, the plant material gets buried under layers of sediment and undergoes heat and pressure, transforming into fossil fuels. This process traps carbon from the plants, which is released when the fossil fuels are burned.