salt{Nacl},water{H2O},and i think air but I'm not really sure on that one
A wedding ring made out of gold, Aluminum foil made out of aluminum, and batteries with lithium. These are 3 pure elements found at home.
Elements are examples of pure substances. Lead is an element, which means lead is pure.
Gold does not readily react with other elements, so it is often found in 'pure' form, also the rocks surrounding the gold prevent it from oxidation.
Gold does not easily bond with other elements found in the earth. However, sodium bonds quite easily with other common elements such as nitrogen and chlorine, so to find pure sodium is unlikely.
because the elements are pure so I can says to element 'pure'
No, because it has only on electron on it's outer shell, it loses it far to easily to other elements to be found pure, such as chlorine to make lithium chloride.
Alkali metals are not found as pure elements in nature.
Elements are examples of pure substances. Lead is an element, which means lead is pure.
Gold does not readily react with other elements, so it is often found in 'pure' form, also the rocks surrounding the gold prevent it from oxidation.
Pure vanilla extract should contain only three elements. Alcohol (at least 35% or 70 proof), water, and vanilla beans.
yes(:
Gold does not easily bond with other elements found in the earth. However, sodium bonds quite easily with other common elements such as nitrogen and chlorine, so to find pure sodium is unlikely.
In scientific terms, an element is anything that can be found on the Periodic Table of Elements (PTE). It is a pure substance, not mixed with anything else. Compounds are a combination of 2 or more elements. They cannot be found on the PTE.
The term is "minerals." Few elements are found in their pure elemental form, and they are mostly metals.
A material that contains three elements joined in a fixed proportion is a pure substance called a compound. It is not a mixture.
The halogens are not found naturally in the earth's crust as pure elements because of their extreme reactivity. Because the halogens are close to having completely filled electron shells, they will often react with other substances in order to gain an electron. As an especially noteworthy case, fluorine is the most reactive of the halogens (and elements in general), and will even react with glass. Therefore, the halogens are found naturally as compounds, not pure elements.
because the elements are pure so I can says to element 'pure'
The chemical substances found in the atmosphere exist as gases.