look up a picture of granite. Is it one similar looking blob, or can you see more than one color or texture in it?
if you can see different colors or textures, it's not homogeneous.
Pure iron in elemental state is homogeneous. Iron Ore is heterogeneous. Iron - as in cast iron, wrought iron or even pig iron, has impurities deliberately added to improve properties. These alloys are mainly homogeneous but do have domains of heterogeneity which give the material the improved properties.
Granite is a rock, not a mineral, gem, or ore. It is a type of igneous rock formed from the cooling and solidification of magma beneath the Earth's surface.
Its considered an ore when it contains enough of a useful substance that it can be sold for a profit.
Blackcoffe is a pure substance
clay,coal,lead,limestone,iron,ore,zinc,barite,timber,marble,granite,sand,gravel,and silver.
Pure Iron is considered as Homogeneous. Whereas, Iron with rust or other impurities is Heterogeneous.
Pure iron in elemental state is homogeneous. Iron Ore is heterogeneous. Iron - as in cast iron, wrought iron or even pig iron, has impurities deliberately added to improve properties. These alloys are mainly homogeneous but do have domains of heterogeneity which give the material the improved properties.
Iron ore is a heterogeneous mixture.
No, granite is not an ore mineral. Ores are the rock form of certain metals.
No, granite is not an ore. Granite is an igneous rock that forms from the cooling of magma and is commonly used in construction and sculpture due to its durability and aesthetic appeal. Ores are minerals or rocks that contain valuable materials that can be extracted economically, such as iron ore or gold ore.
Granite ore, and magnesium peroxide
Pure silver is homogeneous.It has no allotropic phase.
Iron ore is a compound.
no because it contains impurities
Pure silver is homogeneous.It has no allotropic phase.
wood, iron ore, granite, and limestone
Granite is a rock, not a mineral, gem, or ore. It is a type of igneous rock formed from the cooling and solidification of magma beneath the Earth's surface.