Yes, ALL physical things you can touch are made of atoms.
atoms, molecules, and a silicon
what atoms are in the sap from a rubber tree
A tree absorbs carbon dioxide from the air, and, with the input of energy from sunlight, oxidizes many of the oxygen atoms of the absorbed carbon dioxide to elemental oxygen, which is released into the atmosphere. The carbon and some of the oxygen atoms from the absorbed carbon dioxide are incorporated into the structure of the tree as the tree grows.
If a piece of the tree does not rot (decompose) when it dies, and it rests (initially) in a very wet environment, then, over a long period of time, organic atoms (compounds) will be replaced by inorganic atoms (compounds). Thus a fossil.
When a tree decomposes, all the carbon dioxide it absorbed is released back into the atmosphere driven by heterotrophic activities.
your mom is in the cell
They are both made of atoms. Neither are animals. They are both outside. They are both hard. Nobody wants to run into a tree nor a large rock.
D. All of the above. Hint: everything in the universe except a single atom is composed of atoms.
Rubber is a polymer made up of cis-1,4-polyisoprene which is found in the sap of the rubber tree. Because it is a polymer a macromolecule and has a very large and indeterminate number of carbon atoms.
The parts of the tree that burn are undergoing a chemical change. The ashes remaining may or may not have undergone a chemical change, depending on the the chemical bonding that the atoms in the ash had before the tree was burned.
They may have shared the same matter. ApEx!! ;)
Trees are not make of air. They're made of wood, which is mostly cellulose.However, we were all taught that trees take in carbon dioxide (one carbon atom for every two oxygen atoms) and release oxygen (pairs of oxygen atoms). This leaves the carbon atoms nowhere else to go but to form the tree itself. Thus the tree is indeed made of wood (mostly carbon) that was derived from a continual intake of molecules in the air.