Carbon.
the human boddy also contains a very small amount of gold too.
The most common mineral found in the human body is calcium.
The human body is composed of approximately 60 different chemical elements, with the most abundant being oxygen, carbon, hydrogen, and nitrogen. However, all known stable and radioactive elements have been detected in trace amounts in the human body.
By molar amount, hydrogen and oxygen are the most common elements; carbon is the third. By mass, oxygen is the most common, and carbon is the second (with hydrogen being third by mass). By mass, oxygen is the most abundant, and phosphorus is the least, carbon the 2nd, hydrogen, 3rd. By atoms, hydrogen is most abundant, and phosphorus the least, oxygen 2nd, carbon 3rd.
There are probably no elements, beyond the extremely unstable nuclides, that you could not find in the human body at some level.
The three most common elements found in living things and important to the human body are carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. These elements play a crucial role in forming organic molecules such as carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids essential for life processes.
carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, and hydrogen
carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, and hydrogen
about one third of the periodic table, but the most common are:carbonhydrogennitrogenoxygen
carbon, hydrogen, oxygen....
carbon, hydrogen, oxygen....
carbon, hydrogen, oxygen....
Oxygen and hydrogen
The most common mineral found in the human body is calcium.
There are many, many elements in the human body, the most common of which is Carbon, as we are carbon based life forms. There is also a lot of oxygen present in the form of oxides, and other elements such as iron in haemoglobin (present in blood) and phosphorus in DNA.
Water is the most common molecular subsance found in the human body(~98%). and phosphorous is the most abundant element in human body.
The 13 most common elements in the human body are oxygen, carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, calcium, phosphorus, potassium, sulfur, sodium, chlorine, magnesium, iron, and zinc. These elements make up about 99% of the body's mass.
The human body is composed of approximately 60 different chemical elements, with the most abundant being oxygen, carbon, hydrogen, and nitrogen. However, all known stable and radioactive elements have been detected in trace amounts in the human body.