No. Mineral salt doesn't contain carbon. Mineral salts are mainly made off inorganic (carbon free) elements. Of the more than three dozen known minerals, nineteen are necessary for good health. Ca, Mg, Fe are examples of elements of mineral salt element.
Some expensive or rare mineral salts must be recycled.
By photosynthesizing and taking in nutrients and mineral salts from the roots
Urine is composed of water, urea, and excess mineral salts.
organic substances are those most essentially containing carbon in add to hydrogen, oxygen and sometimes nitrogen and phosphurus. protiens, carbohydrates, lipids are organic. inorganic substances are those not containing carbon, such as minerals and salts. water and mineral salts are inorganic.
Potassium mineral salts are used for making some of the enzymes the plants don't need. Potassium mineral salts are used for making some of the enzymes the plants need. Or cheese?......
Bones are hard and contain mineral salts.
Yes, salts contain an anion and a cation.
Salts can contain the majority of the elements from the periodic table of Mendeleev.
it contain Glucose, Amino acids, Vitamins, Mineral salts, Hormones, Carbon Dioxide, Urea, and Fibrinogen.
All natural waters contain salts with concentrations in a very large range.
Metal salts that contain no carbon except as carbonate/bicarbonate.
ligaments
No. They contain phosphorus, oxygen, and usually a metal.
An inorganic mineral does not contain any Carbon
Mineral salts, water, and carbon dioxide.
Two main components: a metal (or ammonium) as cation and an anion.
no protein