Salt (sodium chloride) was formed in the past when water was evaporated from oceans.
The mineral formed from sodium chloride is called halite.
Yes, it can be dumped out of your salt shaker. If you want to grow crystals, simply make a supersaturated solution of salt and hot water, and let it cool.
It varies widley. Some rock salt deposits are only a few years old, while others may be hundreds of millions of years old.
You can find rock salt in salt mines or in mineral shops. It can also be found in many local grocery stores. It is often used in cooking techniques, such as freezing ice cream.
Halite crystals are formed by evaporation from solution. To try this at home, boil some water, add salt until no more will dissolve, and let cool. Crystal growing is fun!
This salt is magnesium chloride (MgCl2).
Salt was formed on the bottom of seas and lakes.
Salt-N-Pepa was formed in 1988.
This is a dune formed from salt.
Mineral deposits hundreds of meters thick resulted as salt would form at the bottom of a pan of evaporated sea water.
Common table salt is Sodium Chloride and it is formed by combining sodium and chlorine.
Yes - it is a "Lewis salt" formed from a Lewis acid and a Lewis base. Most chemists would not call it a salt which is a term they would reserve for the product of the neutralisation of an H+ acid. They would call this an adduct or a complex.
A salt of copper and water would be formed as products.
No, salts, including table salt, are formed by ionic bonding.
Assuming you use sodium hydroxide as the neutralizing agent, then you would form sodium chloride as the salt, and water.
Salt-N-Pepa was formed in 1988.
by catipillers eating the salt and forming it