In a thimble
No, I am unfortunately not sure of the nationwide breakdown of companies offering comprehensive breakdown covers. Good luck finding assistance in this question.
If an object has changed its chemical composition it has been through a chemical change. If you can't reverse what has been done in any way (things like burning, mixing, rusting) it's a chemical change
Try Numrich Gunparts for a breakdown and parts list.
There are many dozens of chemical compounds in a Snickers bar. Just the milk chocolate alone contains sugar, cocoa butter, chocolate, skimmed milk, lactose, milkfat, soy lecithin and artificial flavor. Further, all of these ingredients contain several chemical compounds each. The peanuts, corn syrup, sugar, skim milk, butter, milkfat, partially hydrogenated soybean oil, lactose, egg whites and artificial flavor also included contain multiple chemical compounds each, as well. The only "pure" chemical compound in the ingredient list is salt, or sodium chloride (NaCl). If you are interested in the chemical breakdown of the world's most popular candy bar, you'll be writing a small book on it. Certainly it would be somewhere between difficult and imossible to list all the chemical compounds here. You might want some links to get you started if you want to get to the bottom of things, and you'll find those links below.
Quite a few things. There is detection paper--M8 comes in a booklet, M9 comes on a roll--and a very long list of chemical agent alarms.
A list of things we plan to do is called a To-do list.
List 10 things to be grateful for.
This list is probable at Chemical Abstracts Service; a short list is at this link.
A list of things we plan to do is called a To-do list.
no
List the different categories of staff involved in the reception section of the front