They can occur as either pure substances, for example native gold and sulphur, or combined with other substances in the form of compounds, such as ores.
Only Mercury occurs in nature as a liquid in its elemental state. Bromine is also a liquid element, but does not occur in its elemental form in nature.
first it occur in nature and second it occur in power plant
Two elements that commonly occur in nature as liquids are mercury and bromine. Mercury is a naturally occurring liquid metal, while bromine is a non-metallic element that exists as a liquid at room temperature.
Some elements occur in nature in a pure form, and not as part of a compound with other elements. Elements such as copper, silver, and gold are also minerals. Almost all pure, solid elements are mentals.
If one event can occur in "m" ways and a second can occur independently of the first in "n" ways, then the two events can occur in "mn" ways.
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group 1 elements
gold and silver
nintey two
Bromine and Mercury
No elements can be made from molecules, because molecules are made from elements instead. If the question is really, "What elements normally occur in nature as diatomic molecules?", the answer is hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, chlorine, bromine, and iodine.
No, only the elements up to Uranium (Z=92) occur naturally on Earth. The rest have only been made synthetically, because of their radioactivity which renders them unstable and thus unable to exist naturally. The synthetically made elements are called transuranic elements.