a red crystal
These minerals are evaporites.
Fluorite
Fluorine is a gas, yellowish green and is highly reactive.. Fluorine is most commonly found in nature as a fluoride mineral such as fluorite, calcium fluoride
Antoine Balard discovered bromine using sea weed from the salt marshes of Montpellier, France in 1825. The ash of the sea weed was used to produced bromide chemicals and he distilled bromine from some chlorine saturated sea weed. Carl Jacob Löwig also discovered bromine in Germany during 1825 by extracting it from a solution of mineral salt from a spring and chlorine. The publication of his results was delayed and Balard's were published first.
Halite.
No. Tungsten is a metal and so exists as individual atoms. There are 7 diatomic elements: Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Fluorine, Chlorine, Bromine, and Iodine. All can be found on the right side of the Periodic Table, with the exception of hydrogen, which is in the top left corner.
These minerals are evaporites.
Fluorite
Fluorides are added to toothpaste to reduce tooth decaying. It can be used as a fuel. Also fluorine is a most common mineral in mineral water.
Bromine is an element, one of the halogens. Its chemical symbol is Br.
The natural form of fluorine is the mineral fluorite, or calcium fluoride, with the formula unit of CaF2.
There is no element 'flourine' - it's 'fluorine'. Fluorine was discovered by Henri Moissan in 1886 who perfected a process using electrolysis to produce fluorine from fluorite, a mineral discovered in 1530. Fluorite and fluorine are not the same.
Fluorine is a gas, yellowish green and is highly reactive.. Fluorine is most commonly found in nature as a fluoride mineral such as fluorite, calcium fluoride
Options for hot tub chemicals include standard bromine or chlorine for disinfectant, pH plus and pH minus to adjust pH levels. Some hot tub owners who want more environmentally friendly solutions that use less chemicals are using ozonators, bromine or chlorine salt generators (salt systems), Waters Choice enzyme treatment which reduces chemicals needed, and mineral sticks.
Antoine Balard discovered bromine using sea weed from the salt marshes of Montpellier, France in 1825. The ash of the sea weed was used to produced bromide chemicals and he distilled bromine from some chlorine saturated sea weed. Carl Jacob Löwig also discovered bromine in Germany during 1825 by extracting it from a solution of mineral salt from a spring and chlorine. The publication of his results was delayed and Balard's were published first.
Mineral acids are made of one or more inorganic components and HCl is Hydrogen and Chlorine, and Chlorine is not considered an organic element.
Halite.