Fossil fuel forms from the dead organisms acted on by temperature and pressure of the earth over millions of years.
If you meant to ask, "what type of fuel is formed from dead organisms and is acted on by temperature and pressure here on earth", the answer would be "fossil fuel". Most of our oil comes from the fatty oils (lipids) of dead algae that fell to the bottom of our oceans millions of years ago. At the bottom, they were subjected to intense pressure and thus heat for many years.
Fossil fuel forms from the dead organisms acted on by temperature and pressure of the earth over millions of years.
I don't know, but are you taking Earth Science as well? Coal is the result of decomposition of plant life.
Fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas).
Coal and oil products .
Anaerobic organisms do not require oxygen to survive. On earth, those organisms are limited to many types of bacteria and obligate anaerobes.
Archeo-bacteria
That depends on which organism. Generally, an organism is more complicated than an organ, but if the organism is unicellular (has one cell) then it could be more simple. Since one celled organisms don't have individual organs, then the anwer is that organisms are more complicated than organs.
All living organisms on Earth use DNA as their genetic material.All living organisms use cellular metabolism to obtain and use energy.All living organisms have some form of response to external stimuli.All living organisms undergo reproduction.All living organisms are made up of one or more cells, the basic unit of life. My recommendation:πππππ://πππ.πππππππππ24.πππ/πππππ/394659/πΆππππ01/
Fossil
Fossil
Coal and oil products .
Crude petroleum fuel is formed from the dead organisms by this way.
Only a million ? Then you might get peat.
As you go deeper into the Earth, you very quickly reach a point where the temperature is constant year-round. Both temperature and pressure increase as you go deeper into the Earth.
Both temperature and pressure increase as depth increases.
Temperature and pressure increase massively from the Earth's surface to the centre of the Earth. At the inner core, the pressure is so great that iron is solid, even at such high temperatures.
As you go deeper into the Earth, you very quickly reach a point where the temperature is constant year-round. Both temperature and pressure increase as you go deeper into the Earth.
both temperature and pressure increase as you go down inside earth. hi I am epic
True. Temperature and pressure both increase with increasing depth within the Earth.
both temperature and pressure increase