Non living,as it does not require food,water or air.It does not have any living system or a brain.
No.
Inorganic. Not a result of the processes of organisms.
Water, humus, air, living organisms, and minerals
Living things require cells, soil is made up of minerals and nutrients, not cells.
There are four ways that minerals can be formed:From molten rockFrom solutionWithin living cellsBy recrystallization.The mineral halite and some minerals form when saltwater evaporates. They also occur on or inside the earth with no input from humans.
Going back to living in a cave, and hunting with sharp sticks. No arrowheads- those are minerals, you know. Every aspect of modern life involves minerals and metals obtained by mining.
minerals are non-living
Inorganic minerals.
To my understanding, minerals don't need chelates, we need chelated forms of minerals to better be able to use them. Chelated minerals are a special form of minerals that are found in living things. If the minerals aren't chelated, living things are unable to utilize them.
A rock is made of 2 or more minerals, minerals make up rocks but rocks cannot make up minerals.
minerals are used for daily living. http://jn.nutrition.org/nutinfo/
All living organism required minerals and rat is no exception.
simply
No! The previous answer was very wrong! Minerals are natural, non-living materials that are found naturally in the Earth, and is inorganic, meaning that they were never living things. Living materials would be like fossils.
Yes they aren't.
No. A rock is made of minerals, not living tissues.
Inorganic. Not a result of the processes of organisms.
because it is not a living thing