Minerals are solid substances. Liquid water is not a mineral, but naturally occurring ice, is a mineral. The definition of a mineral requires it be naturally occurring so, artificially frozen ice in your freezer isn't a mineral.
liquid (e.g. water) and minerals.
yes, water and minerals are not alive
Veins carry water and minerals
Soft or hard water has to do with the amount of dissolved minerals in water and what those minerals are. "Harder" water has more dissolved minerals (like calcium.)
Food contains minerals. Pure water (perfectly distilled water) contains no minerals, but naturally occurring water (lakes, oceans, streams, underground water) contains dissolved minerals.
Pure water has no minerals in it. Water with minerals, such as mineral and tap water, have different minerals depending on the processing process and the location where it was collected.
no there is no minerals in rain water
Minerals floats
what carrys water minerals and nutrients
minerals are usually water soluble
Dissolved minerals are usually in the form of ions. Therefore water that is free of dissolved minerals is called deionized water.
Several minerals are left behind when water evaporates.