Unprocessed or unrefined salt present in natural or raw state.
because of the salt in the water
Crude sodium chloride
water from salt, whisky,vodka and crude oil! :)
in order to remove impurities in crude like salt, dirt and other corrosion agents pre treatment is done.
You can eat rock salt but it is in a crude form. It won't hurt you and is generally used to make ice cream and to melt ice on sidewalks.
Tea, Crude oil, salt in water, sugar in water, etc
It has to be refined. Crude oil contains salt, metals, sediment, water, sulfur, acid, and is the wrong viscosity. All of these will destroy an engine.
Yes and No, it all depends on the type of oil that is in the salt water. Heavy crude oils do not mix with salt water, they just clump together and sink to the bottom. light and very light crude oils do mix with water which speeds up their degradation and causes them to evaporate a lot faster. medium crude oil like those from the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico only partially mix with water, that is why you see the pools of oil on the surface and all the oil globs washing up on shore.
nonrenewable: helium?, crude oil, salt, coal, natural gasrenewable: wind, sun
Ex.: crude oil, liquid air, water-alcohol mixture.
wheat that's all i know.
Difference between nymex crude and brent crude