Well, darling, sand is made up of tiny little pieces of rock and mineral particles. These particles can come from a variety of sources, like quartz, feldspar, and even seashells. Mix it all together and voilà, you've got yourself some gritty goodness known as sand.
Silicon and Oxygen make up sand.
Without modifiers, the word "sand" refers to a substance that is almost entirely silicon dioxide.
Elements combine to form compounds through chemical reactions. These compounds have different properties than their individual elements, resulting in a wide range of substances found in nature and synthesized in laboratories.
No. There are 13 elements that are either noble gases or are unstable in nature.
Elements combine to form compounds through chemical bonding, where atoms of different elements share or exchange electrons to achieve a stable configuration. This results in the formation of compounds with distinct properties different from the elements that make them up. Elements, on the other hand, do not combine to form other elements because they are unique substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances by ordinary chemical reactions.
Silicon and oxygen
Common glass is made from sand, SiO2, Na2O and CaO. Concrete is a mixture of rocks (aggregate), sand, and water.
Silicon and oxygen are the two elements that you combine to make sand. =]
No, no I cannot answer this question. Obviously, I don't know.
nuclear fusion
Silicon and Oxygen make up sand.
Elements chemically combine to make molecules.
Humus
Yes
to make babies
Proteins
Molecule