There are a number of atmospheric gases which make up air. The main gases are nitrogen and oxygen, which make up 78% and 21% of the volume of air respectively. Oxygen is utilised primarily by animals, including humans, but also to a small degree by plants, in the process of respiration (the metabolism of food products to generate energy). The remaining 1% of the atmospheric gases is made up of trace gases. These include the noble gases, very inert or unreactive gases, of which the most abundant is argon. Other noble gases include neon, helium, krypton and xenon. Hydrogen is also present in trace quantities in the atmosphere, but because it is so light, over time much of it has escaped Earth's gravitational pull to space. The remaining trace gases include the greenhouse gases, carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, water vapour and ozone, so-called because they are involved in the Earth natural greenhouse effect which keeps the planet warmer than it would be without an atmosphere.
Carbon is an element. It is part of oceans, air, rocks, soil and all living things.
air
Air conditioning.
not technically because air itself is not an allegy but you can be allergic to things in the air like dust and some airborne liquids.
Air is used to inflate tyres , power air-tools , sustain life,
Ice, water and air.
Carbon is an element. It is part of oceans, air, rocks, soil and all living things.
Carbon Dioxide Exhaust Fumes
Rocks, water, air.
air and other things that are in life
there is a part of a ground called permafrost which happens when the ground freezes. There also grasses lichens and mosses. rocks,air,water and soil are the abiotic factors.
These are some things that were invented in France: the hot-air balloon, whipped cream, the guillotine.