Both oil and natural gas are the compressed remains of marine organisms. Both are made due to pressure and heat under buried layers of rock over millions of years.
No, crude oil and natural gas are two distinct fossil fuels. Crude oil is a liquid formed from organic matter buried deep underground, while natural gas is a gaseous fossil fuel mainly composed of methane.
I am trying to find the same k12 question
Fossil fuels - because they were formed from remains of vegetation or algae over millions of years.
Natural gas is found along with crude oil in underground reservoirs because both are hydrocarbons formed from organic matter that decomposed over millions of years. This is why many oil fields also produce natural gas as a byproduct. Methane, the primary component of natural gas, can be found in conjunction with crude oil deposits.
No natural gas is natural gas.
Oil and natural gas
No, crude oil and natural gas are two distinct fossil fuels. Crude oil is a liquid formed from organic matter buried deep underground, while natural gas is a gaseous fossil fuel mainly composed of methane.
Coal, Natural Gas and Oil
Natural gas on top of the oil. Natural gas is less dense.
Adding ethanol to natural gas. Bye now!
I am trying to find the same k12 question
Oil and natural gas.
Fossil fuels - because they were formed from remains of vegetation or algae over millions of years.
Natural gas is found along with crude oil in underground reservoirs because both are hydrocarbons formed from organic matter that decomposed over millions of years. This is why many oil fields also produce natural gas as a byproduct. Methane, the primary component of natural gas, can be found in conjunction with crude oil deposits.
well dipends if your talking about natural oil or bad oil i know that natural oil is made out of broken down parts of dead animals deand plants and others i will get back with you once i know what bad oil is made of alright bye
Natural gas is formed far below the earth's surface by the decomposition of organic materials. Differences in the materials decomposing, time, and the depth and pressure involved in the decomposition determine whether the end result is gaseous, as natural gas, or liquid, as crude oil.
Oil and natural gas are fossil fuels.