Gold does not easily bond with other elements found in the earth. However, sodium bonds quite easily with other common elements such as nitrogen and chlorine, so to find pure sodium is unlikely.
in the ground
You can separate gold from sodium gold chloride by adding zinc powder to the sodium gold chloride and heating the mixture. Then you will be left with just gold.
Gold does not react with sodium bromide.
They are both resources that are found under ground.
You get a mixture of sodium chloride and gold. There will be no chemical reaction. Gold is very unreactive.
in the ground
Gold is found in the ground.
Lithium, sodium and potassium are in group I of the periodic table, which means they have a valency of 1. This makes them highly reactive with other elements, so when they are found they have most likely reacted with another element to form a compound.
Gold is found in the ground.
gold is normally found in caves caves being an in-closed under ground area yes it is normally but because of floods or other natural reasons you may find small amounts above ground but its not likely
yes it is
Someone looked on the ground once and saw it. Thats how gold was found
they found the gold in mines under ground
yes it can
Gold is mostly found in underground mines, especially in regions with high concentrations of gold deposits such as South Africa, Russia, Australia, and the United States. It can also be found in rivers and streams, where it accumulates through erosion and is concentrated in placer deposits.
in India
Metals found native in the ground are metals which are so unreactive that they are still found unchanged or "native"