Your question should be "Are fossils like minerals?" See, a fossil is the skeleton of an animal that was compressed under ground. In the right conditions, the bones can be replaced - or filed - with minerals that leech out of the surround rocks and into the cavity left by the fossil. To answer your actual question more simply, they both come out of the ground.
Meteors come from outer space and crash into our atmosphere which burns them. That's what a shooting star is.
They are found in the troposphere. This is because both water vapor and carbon dioxide are cycled through the atmosphere and the earth. Therefore, their atmospheric components come directly from the earth/ocean which means they will be found in the layer of atmosphere closest to the ground.
Nonrenewable resources come from the earth. They are basically decayed remains that form into fossil-fuels.
N+O = No2
Nitrogen. Used for packaging food or funny science experiments. Oxygen. Used for breathing. Carbon dioxide. Used by plants to grow using photosynthesis.
No. Tectonic forces are from within the earth. Weathering and erosion come from the atmosphere.
No it does not. Atmosphere comes from the earth itself.
Your question should be "Are fossils like minerals?" See, a fossil is the skeleton of an animal that was compressed under ground. In the right conditions, the bones can be replaced - or filed - with minerals that leech out of the surround rocks and into the cavity left by the fossil. To answer your actual question more simply, they both come out of the ground.
Meteors come from outer space and crash into our atmosphere which burns them. That's what a shooting star is.
what planet's resources might come close with earth
they come from earths atmosphere and gases
Plants
Atmosphere
heaven
Nonrenewable resources come from the earth. They are basically decayed remains that form into fossil-fuels.
Mostly from plants.