TRACE observations of active regions show a peculiar extreme ultraviolet (EUV) emission over certain plage areas. Termed `moss'
for its spongy, low-lying, appearance, observations and modeling imply that the phenomenon is caused by thermal conduction
from 3–5 MKcoronal loops overlying the plage: moss is the upper transition region emission of hot coronal loops. The spongy
appearance is due to the presence of chromospheric jets or `spicules' interspersed with the EUV emission elements. High cadence
TRACE observations show that the moss EUV elements interact with the chromospheric jets on 10 s time scales. The location
of EUV emission in the moss does not correlate well to the locations of underlying magnetic elements in the chromosphere and
photosphere, implying a complex magnetic topology for coronal loop footpoint regions. We summarize here the key observations
leading to these conclusions and discuss new implications for understanding the structuring of the outer solar atmosphere.