h2o and sodium chloride. (Salt and water)
Almost all elements are found in sea water. Some elements are man made and do not occur naturally. Salt is the most abundant but if you had the gold from a square mile of sea water, you would be one rich son of a gun.
Seawater is a mixture of different elements and compounds. It is primarily composed of water and contains dissolved salts, minerals, and other substances. So, seawater is not an element but a complex mixture of different compounds.
No; seawater is essentially a mixture of water, salt and other substances such as sand.
Wee
No, bromine exists in nature. It is common in seawater, and in underground aquifers that have been exposed to seawater in the "recent" past.
Sodium chloride (salt) is the most commonly extracted element from seawater. Other elements that can be extracted include magnesium, calcium, and potassium.
atom
Hydrogen, oxygen, trace minerals.
A trace element is considered is a specific element that contains less than 100 parts per million in a sample. In this case, the sample is seawater. According to my understanding, the presence of iodine is very limited in seawater. There is only 0.05 parts per million of iodine in seawater. As such, iodine is considered a trace element in seawater.
sodium is an element and also can be an ingredient of a compound. Sea water contains sodium(salt). They say rainwater is acidic, and if it is then the seawater also contains a form of acid, which is a compound to many types of solutions. Answer to your question: BOTH
Sodium, Na
seawater
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