Heat causes thermal burns. Contact with Flames, hot objects, hot liquids, hot gases, or the fireball from an explosion will result in a thermal burn.
A chemical burn. Strong acids and strong bases both cause chemical burns.
A lot of chemicals burn your skin. The most common chemical to burn you would be Ammonia that will cause your throat to shut and cause your breathing to stop. It will burn your throat really bad possibly leaving blisters.
Yes it happened to me with hydrogen peroxide solution
Yes it can. If it is on your head it is fairly obvious, but any shock may cause you to lose your hair.
Any burn can cause a degradation of the surface layers of the skin and subcutaneous tissue with subsequent scarring. Immediate problems may include pain, fluid loss and infection. Depending on the type of chemical causing the burn, there may be associated toxic effects.
Wash chemical burn with large amounts of water
Chemical.
Neither - but when it does burn it's a chemical change.
A chemical burn.
can be. most permanent. can cause hair burn, smoke, melting if try to bleach or chemical process after
depends on what you burn
That will depend on the specific poison, some cause chemical burns, some don't. There are also poisons that digest tissue, while this is not really a burn it will likely look and feel like one!!!