Interestingly... I was wondering about the same.
Certainly not the final answer- but I found this article:
= Scientific Correspondence = Nature 399, 649-650 (17 June 1999) | doi:10.1038/21352 Joachim Kunz1 Pepin1 suggests, mainly on the basis of three studies2, 3, 4, that solar argon, krypton and xenon might be present in the Earth's mantle. But I believe that the analytical evidence is still too weak to claim such a breakthrough in rare-gas geochemistry. Moreover, other studies5, 6, 7, 8, and the new data I report here, indicate that solar argon, krypton and xenon, if present at all, are only a minor constituent of mantle rare gases.
Argon is a common gas that is used for several different types of industrial processes. Argon can also be used as a preservative and for scientific research.
it is the main source of energy and it creates a grate use of green house gas
Ar is the chemical symbol for argon.
Argon is an element and all the atoms in argon are argon atoms.
argon
Argon is a common gas that is used for several different types of industrial processes. Argon can also be used as a preservative and for scientific research.
argon is 1% of air so its pretty coomon i wouldn't say that argon is a goopd source of percentage of air because as you can see argon is a metal and an element so its probably not common
Argon does occur in potassium-containing minerals as a result of the radioactive decay of K-40. However, this is not a significant source commercially; at nearly 1%, argon is the third most abundant component of the Earth's atmosphere, and it's extracted via fractional distillation of liquefied air.
it is the main source of energy and it creates a grate use of green house gas
If you mean the molecule itself, it comes from the decay of radioactive Potassium-40. If you mean pure Argon, they use cryogenic fractional distillation. (A colder version of a method to extract ethanol from water, etc.)
Ar is the chemical symbol for argon.
Argon is an element and all the atoms in argon are argon atoms.
argon
The element Argon has 8 Isotopes argon-35, argon-36, argon-37, argon-38, argon-39, argon-40, argon-41 and argon-42.The stable isotopes of argon are:argon-36, 0.34%argon-38, 0.06%argon-40, 99.60%Of the radioactive isotopes argon-39 has the longest halflife at about 260 years, all the others have halflives measured in days or much less.
argon
Argon is used to make argon
Curiously enough, the name of argon Is argon.