No.
Sodium sulphate + calcium = sodium chloride is wrong
you can tell this by writing out a chemical equation
NaSO3 + Ca = NaCl <-- This as you can see is wrong, in a chemical equation both sides must have the elements on each side, no new elements can be formed.
I'm not 100% whether SO3 is a sulphate or a sulphite btw*
calcium carbonate
Yes, this is possible; the classic Manheim process use this reaction.
Mix dilute hydrochloric acid with calcium carbonate to obtain a calcium chloride solution; then add sodium sulphate solution to the calcium chloride solution to obtain calcium sulphate precipitate.
Any reaction occur between these two reagents.
Is that possible maybe its meant tot be sodium carnonate and hydrochloric acid? that would make sodium chloride- salt, water and carbon dioxide the gas
They are named from the acids: sodium chloride, sodium carbonate, sodium sulfate, sodium phosphate, sodium citrate, sodium oxalate, sodium fluoride etc.
Sodium chloride = hydrochloric acid, HCl Calcium sulfate = sulfuric acid, H2SO4 Ammonium nitrate = nitric acid, HNO3
Sodium sulphate
The most important is sodium chloride; other salts are magnesium, potassium, calcium chlorides and of course many minor salts.
To make calcium chloride, hydrochloric acid is needed. Calcium chloride is produced by the reaction between calcium carbonate and hydrochloric acid, resulting in calcium chloride, carbon dioxide, and water.
Yes, desiccation is in salt to make thing mummified.
To make calcium carbonate at home, you can mix calcium chloride and sodium carbonate in water. This will cause a chemical reaction that forms calcium carbonate as a solid precipitate. Filter out the solid and let it dry to obtain calcium carbonate.