Not at all. It's like eating sanitized dirt, but i don't recomend trying it.
Moon sand moon sand sand that moulds like dough
Yes. This can be inferred by the fact that many medicine bottles contain packages of silica bead in them with warnings saying "do not eat" "Do not eat" does NOT translate to "poisonous". Silica is Silicon dioxide, equivalent to so much sand. Sand is not toxic. The correct answer is that silica is NOT toxic to humans.
An inert absorbent is used for chemical or toxic spills. Inert absorbents are usually yellow in color and include clay, vermiculite, sand, Oil-Dri, and Flor-Dri.
The moon doesn't have soil like the kind found on Earth. Most of the moon's surface is covered with what is called regolith. This is a combination of fine dust and debris from rocks that was produced when meteors hit the moon.
a toxic city
No , it's just like any other dirt on this planet.
Yes because moon sand has many chemicles in it that are not yet introuduced to the crab. Something may happen to the hermit crab so it would be safe not to put the hermit crab in the moon sand, since scientist have not experimented it and found out for sure.
Moon sand moon sand sand that moulds like dough
Was moon sand ever recalled
It is impossible to cook moon sand to harden it because, as the commercial says, moon sand never dries out.
yes,moon sand is always dry
No because sand will fall apart if its not compact enough
Yes the moon does have water. it is in the sand. to find it you have to find red sand.
No
Logically, no you can't. There is no sand on the moon. That being said if you (for some reason) brought sand to the moon, you very well could. No forces of weathering or erosion would act on it there.
the moon is gray because the color of the moon sand is gray.
sand + eel = moon