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Natural gas began with tiny
plants and animals that lived more than 200 million years ago—even
before dinosaurs roamed the earth! Tiny water creatures and swamp plants
died and were covered over by mud, sand, and silt. Over millions of years,
heat and pressure inside the earth turned their decaying remains into fossils,
and then into natural gas. Like other fossil fuels, natural gas is found deep underground. A rock
formation called a gas trap allows
the natural gas to form and collect. A trap contains three kinds of rock.
The source rock is
the fossilized rock that produces the natural gas. The reservoir rock is
the porous rock that the natural gas seeps into as it rises. And the
cap rock, or
seal, is the layer of very dense rock above the reservoir rock that keeps
the gas from leaking to the surface.  Next: Searching
for the Invisible  Previous: What
Is Natural Gas? 
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