Bismuth
Mercury is a d-block element. It is the only metallic element which is a liquid at standard temperature and pressure. It is widely used in thermometers.Mercury is a metal element. It is used in thermometers,barometers and manometers. Also used to make some medicines and cosmetics.
titanium an iron are commonly used in cosmetics hope this helps
Radium is a very dangerous radioactive element.
Silicon is commonly found in pharmaceuticals and cosmetics. It is used in the form of silicones, which have various properties like moisturizing, smoothing, and protecting the skin.
The element is likely bismuth. Bismuth is a bluish-white brittle metal that is commonly used in certain alloys, pharmaceuticals, and cosmetics.
Components of pharmaceuticals and cosmetics contain many chemical elements: C, H, O, N, S, Al, Ti, Al, Na, Fe, Cl, F, I etc.
You can't go wrong with hydrogen. There's at least some water in most cosmetics, so there's hydrogen. Oxygen, too, by the way.That might not the answer your teacher is looking for, but I can't see how he/she could sy you are wrong.
No, paraffin is not an element. To be an element, a substance must have all the same type of atom. Once it has this, it can go on the Periodic Table. So, as paraffin has many different types of atom in it, it's not an element.
cosmetics from nature,but mainly were all natural
Many different natural and synthetic minerals are used in cosmetics. Mica, iron oxide and titanium dioxide are three very common minerals used in cosmetics.
Walnut oil is sometimes used in cosmetics, however "walnuts" are generally not used in manufactured cosmetics. Ground up walnuts do make a good exfoliant though.
over 100 cosmetics aren't used because of experation dates.