No, dirt is a highly variable mixture of rock and mineral particles, clay, garbage, decaying plant and animal matter, small insects, microbes, viruses, pesticides, synthetic fertilizers, etc., depending on where and how it formed. It also usually contains a variable amount of water.
No. Both chlorine and hydrogen are elements. Elements cannot contain other elements.
Two sets that contain the same number of elements are called "equinumerous" or "equipollent."
Most commonly, oxyacids contain 3 elements. They must contain Oxygen, Hydrogen, and a central atom that can be a variety of different elements. Here are some examples: HClO HBrO4- HIO
Oxygen and Silicon are elements in their own right. They do NOT contain aanything else. However, Silicon and Oxygen can combine to form the molecule 'Silicon Dioxide' ( SiO2 ), of which is sand on the beach is an impure form, mixed with oxides of other elements.
Elements in Group 14 (Carbon family) contain four valence electrons. These elements include carbon, silicon, germanium, tin, and lead.
Both dirt and the human body contain elements such as carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen. These essential elements play a crucial role in supporting life processes and maintaining the structure and function of both dirt and the human body.
92 elements
Iron and other magnetic minerals are some of the most common elements on the planet. Soil and oil that contain these will leave a residue of them behind on a magnet.
Dirt and Dirt!
The elements that hydrocarbons contain are: -Hydrogen -Carbons
that is where is comes from
yes it does
Yes, all the mixtures contain compounds or elements.
Dirt is a mixture. Only what appears on the Periodic Table are elements, and as dirt is a combination of many things it has no single chemical composition so it is not a compound.
Dirt... re re
No. Hydrogen and helium are separate elements. Elements do not contain other elements. But an element can give off or take electron from other elements.
These are types of chemical compounds. Halides contain halogen elements (e.g. chloride, fluoride), oxides contain oxygen, sulfates contain sulfate ions, sulfides contain sulfide ions, carbonates contain carbonate ions, and native elements are pure forms of elements (e.g. gold, silver).