Coal is from decayed plants buried hundreds of millions of years ago. Plants need sunlight to grow.
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Plants using photosynthesis, convert sunlight, water and carbon dioxide to form simple sugars.
Coal is the altered remains of prehistoric vegetation that originally accumulated in swamps and peat bogs.
The build-up of silt and other sediments, together with movements in the earth's crust (known as tectonic movements) buried these swamps and peat bogs, often to great depths. With burial, the plant material was subjected to high temperatures and pressures. This caused physical and chemical changes in the vegetation, transforming it into peat and then into coal.
Coal formation began during the Carboniferous Period - known as the first coal age - which spanned 360 million to 290 million years ago.
Yes, coal as energy indirectly relies on the sun. Coal is formed from ancient plant matter that grew through the process of photosynthesis, which depends on sunlight. Therefore, the energy stored in coal originally came from the sun.
Coal stores energy from the sun in the form of chemical energy. This energy is stored through the process of photosynthesis when plants capture sunlight and convert it into organic compounds through photosynthesis. Over time, these organic compounds are transformed into coal through geological processes.
The original source of energy for coal is the sun. Coal is formed over millions of years from the remains of plants and trees that lived and absorbed sunlight. For wind energy, the original source is also the sun, as the sun's heat causes air to move, creating wind that can be harnessed for power generation.
Coal gets its energy from the sun. Millions of years ago, plants and organic matter trapped solar energy through photosynthesis and converted it into chemical energy. Over time, this organic matter was compressed and heated, forming the coal we use as a fuel source today.
Coal stores energy from the sun as organic matter, such as plants and trees, that absorbed sunlight through photosynthesis and stored the energy in their carbon-rich structures over millions of years. This organic matter was then buried underground and converted into coal through geological processes.
Coal gets its energy from the sun. Millions of years ago, plants and organic matter absorbed energy from the sun through photosynthesis. Over time, this organic matter was buried and compressed, forming coal. When coal is burned, it releases the stored energy from the sun in the form of heat and light.
Yes, coal as energy indirectly relies on the sun. Coal is formed from ancient plant matter that grew through the process of photosynthesis, which depends on sunlight. Therefore, the energy stored in coal originally came from the sun.
sun
Coal is the remains of ancient plant matter compressed by millions of tons of stone and dirt layers. So coal has energy that it got from those original plants. The plants got their energy from the Sun, mostly. So, it is acceptable to say that coal obtains its energy from the Sun.
Coal stores energy from the sun in the form of chemical energy. This energy is stored through the process of photosynthesis when plants capture sunlight and convert it into organic compounds through photosynthesis. Over time, these organic compounds are transformed into coal through geological processes.
wind and coal
The sun?
The original source of energy for coal is the sun. Coal is formed over millions of years from the remains of plants and trees that lived and absorbed sunlight. For wind energy, the original source is also the sun, as the sun's heat causes air to move, creating wind that can be harnessed for power generation.
Coal is a fossilized wood which obtain the major portion of original energy from the sun by the process of photosynthesis.
Yes coal was formed by the bio materials of forests and swamps and the energy as now came from the sun.
We are pretty sure that coal formed from layers of plant matter accumulating at the bottom of a body of water, then being deeply buried under sediment and rock and eventually compressed and transformed by the heat and pressure into coal. The plants that eventually became coal derived their energy from the sun while they were living - just as plants do now - so the sun is the original source of the energy you get from coal.
The source of the energy in coal and wind can ultimately be traced to the Sun. Coal is the compressed remains of vegetation that grew millions of years ago, so that was produced by the sun. Wind is part of our weather, and that is also driven by the sun.