It's Physical your just separating your not mixing chemicals and what not(:
It's Physical your just separating your not mixing chemicals and what not(:
a physical change
as at the end the gravel is still gravel and the sand is still sand. but they have been physically separated.
Separating sand from dirt is a physical change. Removing sand from dirt is a physical change because the sand will not change into a new substance you are not mixing chemicals. It doesn't change the identity of either substance and is very easy to reverse.
i understand where you are coming from.
i will give you two different answers:
if you are separating there elements, it would be a chemical change...
if you are one from the other and not changing the elements/atoms, it would be a physical change.
Its a physical change as they both can still be separated
is separating sand from dirt a chemical change
It's Physical your just separating your not mixing chemicals and what not(:
It's a physical change, but not much of one; because gravel is hard, mixing it with sand doesn't damage the gravel.
This would be a physical change.
sand is a base and gravel is a acid
Gravel is practically insoluble in water.
in a commercial property is gravel considered pavement?
Yes because you can still see the gravel inside the water
gravel it feels hard wet griity and smmooth
No it is not a Chemical Change. It is a Physical Change.
It is a physical change because the chemical composition id not affected.
It's a physical change
No, it's a physical change because you can still separate the two from each other.
It's a physical change
no
The chemical composition of gravel would vary depending upon the geological make up of the rocks, shells etc that the gravel consists of.
Gravel and sand are broken rocks.
Yes, it is possible.
yes it would. you could also separate it with a magnet then the gravel would stick to the magnet. +++ Magnetic gravel? You can separate diatomaceous earth from gravel simply by sieving. Gravel is not magnetic (unless it happens to be a magnetic ore of iron!).
yes it would. you could also separate it with a magnet then the gravel would stick to the magnet. +++ Magnetic gravel? You can separate diatomaceous earth from gravel simply by sieving. Gravel is not magnetic (unless it happens to be a magnetic ore of iron!).
sure, why not.