Yes, salt is not renewable.
Coal, gas and turf (peat) are the main ones.
Nonrenewable energy sources include fossil fuels like coal, oil, and natural gas, as well as nuclear power. Once these resources are depleted, they cannot be easily replaced within a human lifetime.
Because when humans have a great need for these things, we use it faster than it can be produced. These resources take tons of years to recreate so if we keep using them at the really fast pace we are, they'll run out.
Fossil fuels are nonrenewable because they are formed over millions of years from the decayed remains of plants and animals. Since this process takes such a long time, fossil fuels are being consumed faster than they can be replenished, making them nonrenewable resources.
Salt water is a solution of salt, containing of course salt.
No. salt water is salt water. it already has salt in it
salt is not from salt water
acidic salt basic salt normal salt
Salt. Nothing else added. Salt is a crystal and rock salt is salt that is not made into a fine grained salt.
No, pink salt and Himalayan salt are not the same. Pink salt is a generic term for salt that is pink in color, while Himalayan salt specifically refers to salt that is mined from the Khewra Salt Mine in Pakistan.
NaCl is commonly known as table salt - Na=Sodium Cl=Chloride
the salt is the solute