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Fossil Fuels: The Complete List

Across Appalachian seams and Western basins, the landscape and rock record tell the story of ancient life turned into concentrated energy sources; knowing where these deposits occur helps make sense of regional industry and environmental trade-offs.

There are 10 Fossil Fuels, ranging from Anthracite to Sub-bituminous coal. Each entry below is organized as State,Formation age (million yrs),Common locations so you can compare where they formed, their geological age, and typical extraction areas — you’ll find that information below.

How can I use the list to compare fuels by age and region?

Look at the Formation age to gauge geological maturity and rank, check State for regulatory or market context, and use Common locations to learn about regional extraction patterns and infrastructure needs; together these columns make quick, practical comparisons possible.

What’s the practical difference between anthracite and sub-bituminous coal?

Anthracite is a higher-rank coal with more carbon, higher energy density, and fewer volatiles, while sub-bituminous coal has higher moisture and lower heat content, affecting combustion efficiency, emissions, and typical uses in power generation.

Fossil Fuels

Name State Formation age (million yrs) Common locations
Peat solid 0.01 Canada, Russia, Scandinavia, Ireland
Lignite solid 10 Germany, United States, Australia, China
Sub-bituminous coal solid 30 United States, Russia, Australia, Indonesia
Bituminous coal solid 300 China, India, United States, Australia, Russia
Anthracite solid 300 United States (Pennsylvania), China, Russia, South Africa
Crude oil (Petroleum) liquid 150 Saudi Arabia, United States, Russia, Canada, Iraq
Natural gas gas 100 United States, Russia, Qatar, Iran, Turkmenistan
Oil shale solid 150 Estonia, United States, Brazil, China
Oil sands (Tar sands/Bitumen) solid 100 Canada, Venezuela, Russia, Kazakhstan
Methane hydrates solid 10 Arctic permafrost, continental margins worldwide

Images and Descriptions

Peat

Peat

Partially decayed plant matter accumulated in wetlands over thousands of years. Used as local fuel and horticultural soil amendment; emits CO2 and methane when burned or drained. Found in Canada, Russia, Scandinavia, Ireland; sometimes classified as early-stage fossil fuel.

Lignite

Lignite

Young, low-rank coal formed from compressed peat tens of thousands to millions of years ago. Primarily used for electricity generation near mines; lower energy density and higher emissions per unit energy. Major deposits in Germany, United States, Australia, China.

Sub-bituminous coal

Sub-bituminous coal

Medium-rank coal with higher carbon and energy than lignite; formed over tens of millions of years under greater burial and heat. Used mainly for power generation and some metallurgy. Large producers include the United States, Russia, Australia, and Indonesia.

Bituminous coal

Bituminous coal

High- to mid-rank coal formed in Carboniferous and later swamp deposits hundreds of millions of years ago. Used for electricity and coking in steelmaking; emits large CO2, particulates, and mercury. Major producers: China, India, United States, Australia, Russia.

Anthracite

Anthracite

Highest-rank coal with high carbon content, formed by deep burial and metamorphism of bituminous coal. Burns hotter and cleaner than lower ranks; used in metallurgy and heating. Notable deposits in Pennsylvania (USA), China, Russia, and South Africa.

Crude oil (Petroleum)

Crude oil (Petroleum)

Liquid hydrocarbon mixture formed from buried marine and terrestrial organic matter transformed under heat and pressure over tens to hundreds of millions of years. Refined into fuels, plastics, lubricants; major producers include Saudi Arabia, US, Russia, Canada, and Iraq. Significant greenhouse gas and spill risks.

Natural gas

Natural gas

Gaseous mixture mainly of methane formed thermogenically from buried organic matter or biogenically in sediments. Used for electricity, heating, and industry; cleaner than coal per unit energy but still emits CO2 and methane. Major producers: US, Russia, Qatar, Iran, Turkmenistan.

Oil shale

Oil shale

Organic-rich sedimentary rock containing kerogen that yields liquid hydrocarbons when heated (retorting) or pyrolyzed; formed in lakes and marine basins over tens to hundreds of millions of years. Exploited in Estonia, Brazil, United States; extraction is energy-intensive and polluting.

Oil sands (Tar sands/Bitumen)

Oil sands (Tar sands/Bitumen)

Mixtures of sand, clay, water, and thick bitumen formed from biodegraded oil and heavy petroleum under geologic conditions. Extracted in Canada, Venezuela, Russia via mining or steam methods; used for heavy oil production and refining, with high land disturbance and emissions.

Methane hydrates

Methane hydrates

Ice-like crystalline solids of methane trapped in water lattices in permafrost and continental margins; formed from microbial and thermogenic methane over recent to geologic times. Enormous potential resources in Arctic and seabed, but extraction risks release of methane, a potent greenhouse gas.