Water is a compound and not an element. It is non-living.
H2O (water) is a nonliving substance. Living organisms, such as plants and animals, require water to survive, but water itself is not alive.
Contemporary science does not consider water to be an element.
Water is not an element, it is a compound composed of hydrogen and oxygen.
Nonliving elements found in nature are called abiotic factors. These factors can include things like sunlight, temperature, water, and soil. They are essential components of ecosystems and influence living organisms and their interactions.
No, its like the question can coal be produced if i burn the nonliving organisms and than bury it for billions of years hydrogen is also an element!
Nonliving
yes
H2O (water) is a nonliving substance. Living organisms, such as plants and animals, require water to survive, but water itself is not alive.
Some nonliving factors are air, water, soil, sand and rocks.
No. Water is nonliving, so no.
Water
The water cycle
Three examples of nonliving things are rocks (stones, gravel, sand), air and water.
water
Environment
water
Sand, soil, gravel, rocks, water, air - all are abiotic (nonliving) factors in a desert.