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Natural gas was formed millions
of years ago when most of the earth was covered by water. Plant and tiny
animal remains were mixed and layered with sand and mud. When the Earth
underwent natural but drastic changes to form today's landscape, the intense
heat and pressure transformed these fossils into hydrocarbons-chemical compounds
of hydrogen and carbon atoms. Depending on the arrangement of the atoms,
what were once sea plants and animals are now natural gas or crude oil deposits
contained in the earth's crust.
Natural gas (a combustible, gaseous mixture of simple
hydrocarbons) is a very light portion of petroleum, which includes both natural
gas and crude oil. Natural gas may rise to the surface through natural
openings in the earth's crust or can be brought to the surface through man-made
wells. Humans discovered thousands of years ago that this naturally
occurring resource could be burned and used for heat and light. Today,
natural gas continues to be a safe, efficient, environment friendly and abundant
energy source, and new uses for it are still being discovered.
In its natural state you can't see or smell natural gas.
It is colorless, odorless and lighter than air.
Mercaptan, a chemical
odorant, which smells like rotten eggs, is added to natural gas so it can be
smelled if it leaks.
Natural gas is made up mostly of methane, which
has a simple hydrocarbon structure of one carbon atom and four hydrogen atoms
(CH4). This means it burns
easily and emits less pollution.
Natural gas will not by itself burn. Combustion can
occur only when there is a mixture of gas and air - containing between 5% and
15% natural gas and between 85% and 95% air.
When natural gas is burned, it produces mostly carbon dioxide
and water vapor-the same substance emitted when people breathe. Compared
with other fossil fuels, natural gas emits the least amount of carbon dioxide
into the air as it is used-making natural gas the cleanest burning fossil fuel.
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