No, iron in your food is good for you. But if you ate iron that sticks to a magnet that could make you very sick.
Non-magnetic metals such as copper, aluminum, and lead do not typically attract to magnets. These metals do not have magnetic properties like iron, nickel, and cobalt, which are attracted to magnets.
Well, yes, kind of. But they are not magnets, it's gravity.
Foods that are high in iron and proteins include red meat, poultry, seafood, beans, lentils, tofu, nuts, seeds, and quinoa. Incorporating a variety of these foods into your diet can help ensure you are getting enough iron and protein.
Iron
Yes, people in prehistory invented this kind of lighting a fire. Rubbing two dry sticks together makes heat and if you are patient enough it will make fire.
The only three things that magnets can attract to are iron, nickel, and cobalt.
Magnets attract objects made of iron, nickel, and cobalt in a science project.
Metals that are attracted by magnets or that can be turned into magnets are as follows: 1-iron 2-cobalt 3-nickel 4-steel (a compound not an element)
Magnets.
Any kind of metal. ------------------------------ Magnets attract ferromagnetic metals, mainly iron and nickel, and their alloys. ------------------------------
meat
Magnets attract materials that are ferromagnetic, such as iron, nickel, and cobalt. These materials contain atoms with unpaired electrons that align their magnetic moments in response to an external magnetic field.
Yes, we can see the use of iron oxide (the Fe2O3 kind, which is iron (III) oxide) used in magnets. There are a number of different things that could be used in a magnet, but simply using this material, often referred to as ferrite, and a little bit of some other materials to make up the ferrite, will allow for the construction of a magnet.
Three types of metals stick to magnets. They are iron, cobalt, and nickel. Really all substances respond to magnets but only these three metals respond strongly enough to stick.
They used sticks, to cook food on, and lots more.
not really. is depends on what kind of magnets they are.
Magnets stick to materials that are ferromagnetic, such as iron, nickel, and cobalt. They can also stick to materials that are attracted to magnets, like steel. Materials like copper, aluminum, and plastic are not attracted to magnets.