No, I wouldn't. It is more like a insulator, not a conductor. Silver conducts electricity the best. If a current were put through cardboard, it would most likely catch on fire, not conduct electricity.
Not in the amounts you would expect from a metal, but surprisingly yes. This is mainly due to the water in the pores, whose conductivity is increased by ions from the minerals in the shale.
no
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all electricity is natural, due to the fact that electricity is a force of nature. you may be referring to "voltage" which is the difference of charge we sometimes create in order to get work out of electricity, a "synthetic" example would be the 110V at an outlet i suppose, while a natural example would be lightning, or the shock you get from touching a door knob after dragging your feet on carpet.
in the toilet season
yes, molten sodium chloride may conduct the electricity but is not a good electrolyte.
I would say that salt water would conduct electricity best.
A water solution containing ions conduct electricity.
Of course - yes.
the metal
because the electricity would create a reaction that would cause fires
salt
Not in the amounts you would expect from a metal, but surprisingly yes. This is mainly due to the water in the pores, whose conductivity is increased by ions from the minerals in the shale.
The chemical structure of Sulfur would prevent the conduction of electricity.
Insulator
Apple juice
Infinity