No, in dietary terms it is a mineral.
No, in dietary terms it is a mineral.
oxygen
Iron Age.
Sphalerite is the main ore of zinc, a mineral dietary supplement, and rustproofing material.
Here are some of the minerals in alphabetical order:aluminiumarsenicbismuthcalciumcopperdiamondemeraldepidotefeldspar (group of minerals)fluoritegoldgraphitehalite (AKA rock salt)hematiteironjasperkaolinitekyaniteleadmagnesiummanganesemicanickelonyxphosphorous (dietary mineral)pyrite (fool's gold)quartzquenstedtiterhodiumrubyselenitesilvertalctinulexiteumber (natural brown clay)vauxitevermiculitewolframitexenotimexonotliteyttrialiteyttroceritezinc (dietary mineral)zirconPlease note that Wikipedia has an excellent mineral list under "list of minerals."
yes its a mineral. No, it is a chemical element that does not occur in pure form, only as a component in minerals. Here's a list: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Sodium_minerals So strictly speaking, although it is often referred to as a mineral in dietary discussion, it is technically not a mineral.
No, Salt is a dietary mineral composed primarily of sodium chloride.
manganese
manganese
manganese
Zinc, sodium chloride, and certain b vitamins for adequate histamine release.