All alkaline earth metals and their salts are reactive and they have a blue-print that identifies them as an alkaline earth metal but metals exist as metals, and salts as salts, with different structural compounds.
All cooking salts are salty, not all salts are. Gipsum is a salt, but has no discernable taste at all. It is so bland that it is used as a filler and bulker in some food items, and its natural fire resistant properties make it perfect for drywall.
In Epsom, UK.
This phenomenon is called salinization.
No. Not the metal itself but some of its salts and compounds are.
Bath salts are specifically formulated to dissolve in water, adding a fragrance to bath-night.
Various salts are added to the mix:Copper salts - blueStrontium salts - redSodium salts - yellowBarium salts - greenCalcium salts - orangeCobalt salts - blueCryolite - yellowLithium salts - bright red
- carbonates are salts.- oxides are...oxides not salts- hydrogencarbonates are salts
They are ionic salts.
Radioisotopes are not salts but salts may contain radioisotopes.
Examples: organic or inorganic salts, basic or acidic salts, natural or artificial salts etc.
This is a mixture of salts.
bath salts
Zinc salts
Only some salts have hydrates, not all. These salts contain in the formula water of crystallization.
Guanidinium salts are salts derived from guanidine - CHN(NH2)2.
Chromate salts are the salts containing the anion chromate (CrO4)2-.