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No. It used to be a part of a living thing though.
a seashell is not an organism, there needs to be a living thing in it to make it into an organismThe seashell itself is not an organism, but the animal that lives in it is an organism.The seashell itself is not an organism, but the animal that lives in it is an organism.
The actual seashell is not living, it is a hard, protective outer layer made by an animal that lives in the sea. The shell is not part of the body and was never living. The common seashell is produced by a mollusc, and by the time the shell reaches the shore, the invertebrate has been eaten or rotted out, leaving the more durable exoskeleton - the seashell.
the answer is dead why would it be living.....
A seashell may refer to the non-living covering of a living mollusc, or it can refer to the living mollusc itself. So it depends on the context; in any case, the seashell is or was part of a living thing. The chemical composition of a seashell (mostly calcium carbonate) is not a living tissue, but it is connected to (and constructed by) living tissue, just as skin, hair, bones, and teeth are in mammals. When the mollusc dies, the seashell is dead material. But since it is not an organic compound, it is not broken down as other animal tissues are. Similarly in plants, the structures of coral reefs persist because they include minerals not usually broken down by detrivores.
The seashell was very pretty.She held the seashell to her ear and got nipped by a hermit crab living inside it.The paint was called "Seashell Blue".
What is the living part of the forests
cochlea
The leaf of a plant is part of a living thing.
A cell is the smallest part of a living thing that can carry out life processes.
No, the heart is an organ, a part of a living thing, animal. An organism is an entire living thing not just one organ, or "part".
it is a part of the body