Yes because you can still see the particles of sand after both the sand and water have been mixed.
It is heterogeneous because the sand is not dissolved in the water. Apparently, the sand is still visible from the outside, unlike perhaps salt water in which the salt can no longer be seen.
homogenous.
Water and oil is a heterogeneous mixture. Oil can be separated from water via specific methods. That's why a combination of water and oil is heterogeneous.
sandy water is water with sand in it
A simple water accordingly is a Heterogeneous mixture.
River water is generally a heterogeneous mixture based on the different components it is carrying. Water by definition is not an element, rather a molecule comprised of them.
This is a heterogeneous mixture.Blood cells are easily separated from water.
heterogeneous
Muddy water is a heterogeneous mixture because it consists of visibly different particles suspended in water. The particles can settle over time, showing that muddy water is not uniform in composition.
Because they are mixed together it becomes heterogeneous.
Assuming you can't see the individual particles of its components and it has the same consistency throughout, it is a homogenous mixture.
no their is no water in the great sandy derest