Magnesium
Seawater is neither a compound nor an element but a mixture including much dissolved solid and usually microorganisms as well.
Titanium and zirconium, for example, are resistant to corrosion in seawater.
In any given sample of seawater, you will probably find all 90 elements, but some of them are going to be in extremely minute quantities.
seawater, french fries, and in salads
the materials extracted from the sea are the salt- and seawead and driftwoodanswer 2 Salt, Iodine from seaweeds, agar from seaweeds, some of the world's magnesium is recovered from seawater. 'Drinking water' by reverse osmosis.
Gold has been extracted from seawater, but the cost is not worth the effort for the very small amount that can be obtained.
Halite (NaCl) is extracted by mining or from seawater by crystallization/recrystallization.
aluminium
Salt, water, and gold.
Sodium chloride is extracted from mines or seawater.
the main element extracted was radium
Seawater is neither a compound nor an element but a mixture including much dissolved solid and usually microorganisms as well.
A trace element is considered is a specific element that contains less than 100 parts per million in a sample. In this case, the sample is seawater. According to my understanding, the presence of iodine is very limited in seawater. There is only 0.05 parts per million of iodine in seawater. As such, iodine is considered a trace element in seawater.
Salt (sodium chloride, NaCl) is extracted from salt mines or seawater.
No; seawater is essentially a mixture of water, salt and other substances such as sand.
Titanium and zirconium, for example, are resistant to corrosion in seawater.
Einsteinium is not extracted from the earth, it is an artificial element.