yes, Calcium can be burned. When burned it releases a bright orange color in the flame.
A sweat gland is any glad that releases perspiration. A person sweats when they are in a hot environment or when they are nervous and in a dangerous situation.
Because seashells are made of Calcium Carbonate, which when reacted with acid produces carbon dioxide and water.
The parathyroid gland secretes the hormone parathormoneor parathyroid hormone (PTH).The function of PTH is to increase the concentration of calcium in the blood. It does this in three ways:increasing the release of calcium from the bonesincreasing the reabsorption of calcium from the kidney tubulesincreasing the absorption of calcium from the intestinePTH is a polypeptide hormone, made up of 84 amino acids.See the related link for more information.It is called PTH, or parathyroid hormone. It is part of the endocrine glands and to look this up i'd suggest a physiology book
Because the water molecules 'lock' together when the temperature drops - forming solid ice. Warming up the ice-cube releases the 'lock', and the ice turns back to water.
your bones
The endoplasmic reticulum has a store of calcium ions, Ca 2+, that it releases as second messengers in signalling transduction. Also the scarcoplasmic reticulum releases this ion in the process of sarcomere contraction.
Troponin
The Sarcoplasmic Reticulum stores calcium and releases it through the terminal cisternae into the tubule.
calcitonin
It releases a gas of CO2 and the solid formed is a poo.
Thyroid
Sarcoplasmic reticulum stores and releases calcium ions within striated skeletal muscles.
i am not positive but i think it is calcium because i know they need liquid calcium drops if you have one as a pet.
calcium Ca2+
yes, Calcium can be burned. When burned it releases a bright orange color in the flame.
calcium ions.