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Oxygen, hydrogen & Argon.In order, large percentages of Nitrogen, Oxygen followed by trace amounts of Argon are the most abundant elements in the earth's atmosphere.
They are called bridge elements because the 'bridge' the first two elements with only one electron shell to the rest of the Periodic Table, which have ascending amounts of electron shells. The first two are also the most abundant elements in the universe.
There is no such word as "corpious". -You possibly mean 'COPIOUS' which means abundant or in large amounts.
Tiny amounts of minerals are called 'trace' amounts.
No. The Earth's Biosphere is composed almost entirely of Carbon, Oxygen and Hydrogen with some Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Sulfur and trace amounts of other elements. However, Silicon is the second most abundant element in the earth's crust - second only to Oxygen.
Yes, all elements that are not radioactive occur in nature. In fact, boron is present in small amounts in every rock. It is also quite abundant in the ocean (5 parts per million).
lipids
Synthesis and storage of glycogen
Fish oil
For the most part at the moment our Sun is made up of hydrogen fusing into helium, they account for 74.9% and 23.8% of the suns mass other elements known as metals account for less than 2% of the mass. The most abundant metals are oxygen (roughly 1%), carbon (0.3%), neon (0.2%), and iron (0.2%). When the sun runs out of hyrdogen to fuse it will start to convert Helium in to Carbon, at this point life on earth will not be viable.
Air contains abundant oxygen and trace amounts of hydrogen.
Natural gas is not a compound, so there is no particular molecule. The two most abundant components are methane (CH4) and ethane (C2H6). Both of these compounds are composed of two elements: carbon and hydrogen. Minor components of natural gas lead to it having trace amounts of sulfur and helium.