Calcium
Calcium is probably the answer you seek. However, it also has a lot of phosphorus as well as zinc, potassium, iron, magnesium, manganese and traces of copper, selenium and strontium.
Each known mineral has a specific chemical composition.
its not a mineral
Hydroxylapatite is the mineral substance in bone. It is a calcium compound.
The color of a mineral sample is determined by its chemical composition
I would say ceramic, since they crawl in the sand, but any living thing, as well as bones are made out of carbon. So if you can relate a conch to the bone then the inorganic composition of bone (bone mineral) is formed from carbonated hydroxyapatite.
I think you mean "BMI", which stands for Body Mass Index.
Minerals are stored in the bone. To be more specific, the mineral that is stored in the bone is calcium.
white clay or Kaolin (which is a clay mineral with the chemical composition Al2Si2O5(OH)4). Other materials mixed with China clay to make porcelain clay have included feldspar, ball-clay, glass, bone ash, steatite, quartz, petuntse and alabaster.
the composition of luster is limstone
No, a fishbone is not a mineral. Minerals are naturally occurring inorganic substances with a specific chemical composition and atomic structure, while a fishbone is made up of organic material primarily composed of calcium and collagen.
The chemical composition of a mineral is important because it helps identify the mineral and provides information on its physical and chemical properties. Understanding the composition can help determine how the mineral formed, where it is found, and how it can be used in various applications.