YES!!! It is a form of calcium carbonate (CaCO3). Hence it is a compound of calcium.
Marble is calcium carbonate - CaCO3.
calcium undergoes metamorphosis to become marble with heat and pressure.
Because chemically, both are mainly made from calcium carbonate.
Marble will fizz because of the chemical reaction with its calcium carbonate makeup.
Because Taj Mahal is made up of Marble and Marble is made up of Calcium Carbonate. When Calcium Carbonate reacts with Acid it corrodes. Means the Marble corrodes and turns pale due to losing its white lustre.
Marble is made from limestone.
calcium
The mineral made up of a calcium compound and commonly found in marble is called calcite. Calcite is a carbonate mineral composed of calcium carbonate (CaCO3) and is often the main component of marble, providing its characteristic white color.
No, because marble is not an element. It is a compound containing Calcium, Carbon and Oxygen. It has the chemical formula CaCO3.
'Marble' is meta-formosed limestone or chalk. Limestone or chalk has been subject to either heat and/or pressure, and become the harder shiny rock of marble. Marble is calcium carbonate!!!!
Calcium Carbonate - also called limestone, calcite, chalk, and marble.
YES!!! It is a compound at any temperature up to approximately1000K, where upon it undergoes thermal decomposition to form Calcium Oxide (CaO)/(Lime) and carbon dioxide (CO2).
This is a very simple question that has a rather complicated answer. Marble is typically more than 95% calcium carbonate, perhaps even 99% calcium carbonate, and calcium carbonate is a compound. Many of the "fine chemicals" that you would find in jars in your school laboratory would have a similar purity to a good quality marble. So marble has a good claim to be recognised as a compound. However, if you look at a piece of marble, it has numerous very pretty stripes and blotches -- often known as "marbling" even. Clearly marble is not a homogeneous material. The small amount of various impurities in marble produce its very pretty appearance. So marble must also be recognised as a mixture.
It is almost a compound - calcium carbonate - but with little amounts of other substances which makes it, technically, a mixture.
CaCO3
Marble is calcium carbonate.
Calcium oxide
Marble is calcium carbonate - CaCO3.