I would say yes but i am not much of a scientist.
Answer:
Yes and no. No, because there are some radioactive heavy elements that are made in laboratories. And also Yes, because those elements are made from particles or materials that are part of God's creation.
It's like asking if God created cars. We make the cars, but we use materials created by God (and the wisdom He gives us).
Ask god! He might know, if not, look at your periodic table dumbs. Go back to the eighth grade!
All the existing chemical elements, natural or artificial, are in the periodic table of Mendeleev.
It means that the world was not created by itself. There must be some Creator to create something. The world is created by God means that it was created by Almighty God.
Because, God created everything, and he then created an image in himself, a man (Adam), and then Adam needed a lover so he created woman (Eve).
because god made it that way.
God.
Father as in who created it? That would be Mendeleev, he even named the 101st element after himself. Improving: Mendeleev, was the father of the periodic table of elements, he discovered this method of organizinging the elements by playing a game of solitare with the chemical symbols.
If you are a Creationist the answer is God, if not then the answer is they just exist. or scientists found them and put it into the periotic table. Scientists may have discovered them, they certainly didn't invent them, and I think you mean the periodic table of elements.
Neon is an element. It is found on the periodic table of the elements at atomic number 10 in the Noble gases. In other words, neon was not "invented". It was either created by God, or spun off during events following the Big Bang, depending on what you believe.
There is no single Hebrew word that means "gift from god" To say this in hebrew would be matanat ha'el (×ž×ª× ×ª האל)
Ask god! He might know, if not, look at your periodic table dumbs. Go back to the eighth grade!
All the existing chemical elements, natural or artificial, are in the periodic table of Mendeleev.
They were created by God.
Brigitte Bardot
Mercury from both the planet and the Roman god; Uranium is named after the planet Uranus and Plutonium after the (former) planet Pluto; Neptunium, after the planet Neptune. Tellurium, element 52, gets its name from the Latin "tellus" meaning Earth. Not planets, but element 2, Helium is named from the Greek helios, Sun, and Selenium from the Greek selene, Moon.
No one 'invented' radium; it is an element on the periodic table. Radium was discovered, however, by Marie Skłodowska-Curie, Pierre Curie and Gustave Bémont in 1898.
The planet Neptune is named after a Roman god named Neptune... The chemical element neptunium is in the periodic table after uranium; also the planet Neptune is after Uranus in the Solar system - it is an analogy.