Sodium carbonate can be made by the Solvay process from brine (sodium chloride) and limestone (calcium carbonate). In the US there are large deposits of a mineral called Trona which is sodium bicarbonate carbonate, and it is obtained from that.
Potassium carbonate is made by electrolysis of potassium chloride which is found as mineral Sylvite, which gives potassium hydroxide which is then carbonated with CO2.
See wikipedia entries for Solvay Process, Trona, and Potassium Carbonate
When carbonate minerals come into contact with hydrochloric acid, a chemical reaction occurs where the carbonate minerals react with the acid to produce carbon dioxide gas, water, and dissolved metal chloride salts. This reaction results in the dissolution or effervescence of the carbonate mineral.
When carbonate minerals come into contact with hydrochloric acid, they will react and produce carbon dioxide gas, water, and soluble chloride salts. This reaction is often used to test for the presence of carbonate minerals.
When carbonate minerals come into contact with hydrochloric acid, they will react by producing carbon dioxide gas, water, and soluble chloride salts. This reaction is a type of chemical weathering process that dissolves the carbonate minerals and generates effervescence. It is often used as a simple test to identify carbonate minerals based on the visible reaction.
When carbonate minerals come into contact with hydrochloric acid, a chemical reaction occurs, producing carbon dioxide gas, water, and a salt. The carbon dioxide gas is released as bubbles, which is a visual indicator of the reaction taking place. This reaction is used to test for the presence of carbonate minerals.
Calcium carbonate in speleothems comes from the dissolution of limestone or dolomite bedrock by slightly acidic groundwater. This dissolved calcium carbonate is then deposited in caves as stalactites, stalagmites, and other formations through the process of precipitation.
Molten rock are come from volcanic in the past, or the lava chambers. Another call of molten rock are igneous rock.
Calcium carbonate (limestone) is used in blast furnaces to capture impurities and form a slag that floats above the molten iron to keep the impurities from mixing back into the iron.
Not strictly renewable since it is produced from minerals that are finite, but there are very large amounts available, no risk of running out.
igneous
carbonate containing rocks
Lava
When carbonate minerals come into contact with hydrochloric acid, a chemical reaction occurs where the carbonate minerals react with the acid to produce carbon dioxide gas, water, and dissolved metal chloride salts. This reaction results in the dissolution or effervescence of the carbonate mineral.
The igneous rock is formed when a rock that is solidified from molten or partly molten matierial.
When carbonate minerals come into contact with hydrochloric acid, they will react and produce carbon dioxide gas, water, and soluble chloride salts. This reaction is often used to test for the presence of carbonate minerals.
from volcanos that were on the moons surface long ago
molten rock
No, molten rock is not called coral. Coral is a marine organism made up of tiny, living polyps that form calcium carbonate structures, typically found in warm, shallow ocean waters. Molten rock that reaches the Earth's surface is referred to as lava, while the solidified form is known as igneous rock.