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Sodium bicarbonate is a product of the chemical industry.But it is exist also in nature as the mineral nahcoliteor dissolved in mineral waters.
The salts dissolved in water are very different: - in sea water the principal component is NaCl; also MgCl2, CaCl2 - mineral waters contain many types of salts depending on the origin - the same situation for residual waters
Plants absorb mineral salts from soils and waters.
Carbonated mineral waters are acidic.
Tin cans doesn't affect the amount of dissolved oxygen in waters.
Sodium bicarbonate is a product of the chemical industry.But it is exist also in nature as the mineral nahcoliteor dissolved in mineral waters.
There are a great many different mineral waters that are indeed chlorinated. Not all mineral waters have been chlorinated though.
James K. Crook has written: 'The mineral waters of the United States and their therapeutic uses' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Mineral waters, Mineral Waters
The salts dissolved in water are very different: - in sea water the principal component is NaCl; also MgCl2, CaCl2 - mineral waters contain many types of salts depending on the origin - the same situation for residual waters
Hydrogen ions.
Plants absorb mineral salts from soils and waters.
Carbonated mineral waters are acidic.
The answer is infiltration
J. G. Souther has written: 'Mineral and thermal waters of Canada' -- subject(s): Mineral waters, Springs
Alexander Taylor has written: 'Man' -- subject(s): Medical climatology 'On the curative influence of the climate of Pau, and the mineral waters of the Pyrenees, on disease' -- subject(s): Mineral Waters, Mineral waters, Climate, Health resorts, Medical climatology, Health Resorts
Tin cans doesn't affect the amount of dissolved oxygen in waters.
salt is one of the dissolved substances in inland waters... well in outland,, I'm not really sure!!