The period of coal formation began during the Carboniferous Period 360 million to 290 million years ago. This predates the existence of humans and even mammals by several hundred million years.
Coal forms from the remains of plants that have been buried and compressed over millions of years. Human fossils would not be found in coal deposits because humans did not exist during the time when the plants that formed the coal were alive. Additionally, the conditions necessary for coal formation are not conducive to the preservation of human remains.
Fossils of the same species of land mammals have been found on separate land masses. Coal fields in the Americas and Europe share many similarities and it is highly possible that they were once connected to form a large coal field.
Coal forms from plant material that undergoes slow decomposition under high pressure and heat over millions of years. Human fossils are unlikely to be preserved in coal because humans are relatively recent in geological time and are less likely to have been present in the environments where coal formed. Additionally, human remains are usually buried in circumstances that do not lead to coal formation.
coal is not a trace fossil
It isn't from fossils, Oil and coal are from ancient fossils that changed into coal and oil over time
it can be sedimentary rocks
Question is not clear.
Coal because coal has alot of little specks of stuff and not all of the specks are fossils but alot of them are
the answer is coal
fossils
Oil and natural gas.
Oil , coal, and natural gas