Sand is not a homogeneous material.
No, if sand is included its heterogeneous.
Beach sand is a heterogeneous mixture
no, a homogeneous mixture is salt water, seawater has other particles in it like sand, bacteria, and other debris that can be seen making it heterogeneous
Sand, for the most part, is homogeneous. If you go to the beech, the particles of sand are of uniform size and chemical composition. Although you might find a foreign object, such as a coin, an article of jewelry, a cigarette butt, or a piece of shell, sand is very consistent and uniform; therefore, it is homogeneous.
It is heterogeneous mixture because it is not mixed in equally.
Homogeneous
This mixture is not homogeneous.
no
Homogeneous because you can't see the carbon in the sand.
Finally divided sand may be homogeneous.
Salt and sand is a mixture.
yes if it is mixed with water no i am not sure
I don't know
No, if sand is included its heterogeneous.
Beach sand is a heterogeneous mixture
Sand itself is homogeneous (each grain is homogeneous), however sand in general (lots of grains of sand, as in a handful of sand) is heterogeneous because it both has other things than sand mixed in and also it is not a pure solid (it is not a large rock of sand).See the Related Questions to the left for more information about heterogeneous and homogeneous mixtures.Sand itself is a homogeneous but it's not a mixture. It's a compound. If your talking about a bucket of sand it isn't uniformed throughout it would be a heterogeneous mixture because it's uniform of each piece of "sand" varies. It would be a homogeneous mixture if all the sand in the bucket where the uniformed throughout. For example if all the specs of sand in the bucket are SIO2 silicon dioxide it is a homogeneous mixture.Chemistry the central science 11 editions and their book still confuses people. You think they could explain what they are talking about a little bit better. It's only a 400 dollar book.
Sand and pebbles is a heterogeneous mixture. A solution is a homogeneous mixture.