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The Bluewater Shopping Centre is located in Greenhithe, Kent, England. This is an extremely large shopping location that is about 17.8 miles east south-east of London. The shopping centre is situated on land that was a former chalk quarry and it is the fourth largest shopping centre in the United Kingdom.
that would be hard
It is the second largest in the UK apparently:"Situated on a 240-acre (97 ha) plot in a former chalk quarry, the centre has a sales floor area of 154,000 m² (1,600,000 ft²) over two levels, making it the second largest shopping centre in the UK after Gateshead's MetroCentre."Hope that this helps.
Chalk is water soluble. Which means rain would destroy the building.
chalk would come first
Shaking chalk in a container would break it down into smaller pieces and create chalk dust. This would help disperse the chalk more evenly and produce a finer application when writing or drawing.
The build up of calcium deposits in a micrometer. It may happen as a result of dust from blackboard chalk settling in the screw mechanism of the micrometer.The build up of calcium deposits in a micrometer. It may happen as a result of dust from blackboard chalk settling in the screw mechanism of the micrometer.The build up of calcium deposits in a micrometer. It may happen as a result of dust from blackboard chalk settling in the screw mechanism of the micrometer.The build up of calcium deposits in a micrometer. It may happen as a result of dust from blackboard chalk settling in the screw mechanism of the micrometer.
why the heck would you wat to eat chalk.
Any, the answer depends on what the experiment is about.
If chalk was used for a statue, it would not be a suitable material as chalk is fragile and susceptible to erosion and damage from weather conditions. The statue would likely deteriorate quickly, losing its form and details.
Chalk is a fossil itself and chalk is soft, and so while you might form a fossil; in it, it would not remain. Within chalk there is often harder rock - which sometimes does contain fossils.
Filtration would separate the water, leaving the chalk particles behind.