Science, asked by RitvijCjoudhary, 9 months ago

describe how coal is formed from dead vegetation and also name the process​

Answers

Answered by aanchal4296
0

Answer:

Coal formed millions of years ago when the earth was covered with huge swampy forests where plants - giant ferns, reeds and mosses - grew.  As the plants grew, some died and fell into the swamp waters.  New plants grew up to take their places and when these died still more grew.  In time, there was thick layer of dead plants rotting in the swamp.  The surface of the earth changed and water and dirt washed in, stopping to decaying process.  More plants grew up, but they too died and fell, forming separate layers.  After millions of years many layers had formed, one on top of the other.  The weight of the top layers and the water and dirt packed down the lower layers of plant matter.  Heat and pressure produced chemical and physical changes in the plant layers which forced out oxygen and left rich carbon deposits. In time, material that had been plants became coal.

Answered by GeniusAnsh14
2

Answer:

The dead vegetation decomposes if buried in the soil with the help of micro organisms (bactaria) . The buried organism goes deep inside the earth . Due to this pressure is applied on it and the water containt inside it is removed from it and coal is form

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