no. As Fossil Fuels are the ancient remains of animals and plants, they only occur where they used to live. There aren't any in Iceland, as much of it is volcanic rock formed fairly recently, but there was much in America, as it is old ground that was home to many creatures, such as Dinosauria.
yes.
The hydrosphere, and it includes all the water on earth.
yes it is !it is 60% of earth's crust.feldspar are also used as tiles!
Most of them do. In Fact the earth worm is a member of the reptiliengrubbus family. All members of this family have scales that are placed symmetrically over a thin shiny piece of skin.
A volcano. Because it can emit enough dust and airborne particles to cast a cooling shadow over the earth for some time.
Mineral fuel is a broad category that includes both fossil fuels (such as coal, oil, and natural gas) and other resources like uranium. Fossil fuels specifically refer to hydrocarbons that formed from the remains of ancient plants and animals over millions of years. So, all fossil fuels are mineral fuels, but not all mineral fuels are fossil fuels.
No Solar and wind power are both not fossil fuels.
No.
Halogens are not the basis of all fossil fuels. Fossil fuels are primarily composed of hydrocarbons, which are compounds made of hydrogen and carbon. Halogens like chlorine, bromine, and fluorine are not key components of fossil fuels.
no electricity is made from fossil fuels.
No, not all fossil fuels contain methane. Fossil fuels primarily consist of carbon and hydrogen, with varying amounts of other elements like sulfur, nitrogen, and oxygen. Methane is mainly found in natural gas, which is a fossil fuel, but not all fossil fuels contain methane.
No, halogens are not the basis of all fossil fuels. Fossil fuels are primarily made up of hydrocarbons, which are compounds of hydrogen and carbon. Halogens, like chlorine and fluorine, are not typically found in significant amounts in fossil fuels.
Burning fossil fuels does not cause the earth to lose weight. The chemical changes caused by the combustion of fuels destroy some compounds and create others. But in the end, all the matter we started with is still here in one form or another. Every atom.
Fossil fuels are primarily composed of hydrocarbons, which are molecules made up of hydrogen and carbon atoms. The main types of fossil fuels include coal, oil, and natural gas, all of which were formed from the remains of ancient plants and animals that underwent geological processes over millions of years.
Fossil fuels are disappearing because we are taking them from the earth quicker than the earth can produce them and when they are all gone the world will go into crisis as peaple arn't ready for this to happen. What we need to do is build wind farms and solar panels.
Carbon is the component found in all living matter and fossil fuels.
Fossil fuels come from plants and microscopic organisms, which long ago died and were buried in the earth and slowly transformed into coal, oil, and gas. These plants and microorganisms once, millions of years ago, got their energy from the sun. Thus, all fossil fuels received some solar energy.