Sunday, July 13, 2008

Buried sunshine


Nearly all rocks are made of minerals - things that are not alive and never have been. But there is one kind of rock that is not made of minerals. It is coal, a black shiny rock made of - green plants !

Millions of years ago much of the world was hot and swampy. Strange-looking trees and giant ferns covered most of the land. When these big plants died, they toppled over and sank into the mud. Then they were buried under other plants that fell on top of them. In time, there was a thick layer of dead plants. As the plants rotted, they formed a thick, lumpy brown stuff called peat.

Parts of the land began to sink. Water poured in, bringing mud and sand that covered the peat. Tons of water, mud, and sand pressed down on the peat, squeezing it tightly together. All this weight and squeezing turned the peat into coal.

After millions of years, the earth changed. Places that had been covered with water became dry land. Mud and sand had turned to rock. The great masses of coal were buried deep in the rock.

Today, miners dig coal out of the earth. Coal is burned to heat houses, schools, and other buildings. Burning coal is used to make steam that turns the big machines that make electricity for heat, light, and power. When we burn coal, we are really burning plants that grew millions of years ago. This is why coal is sometimes called "buried sunshine".

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