Excessive iron in pools can cause discoloration, turning the water green, brown, or rusty-colored. It can also lead to staining on pool surfaces and equipment. Proper water testing and treatment with sequestrants or chelating agents can help prevent and resolve iron-related issues in pools.
Much like it does now.
Yes, carrots do contain traces of iron along with other essential nutrients like Vitamin A and Vitamin K. While carrots are not a significant source of iron compared to other foods like red meat or spinach, they can still contribute to your overall iron intake as part of a balanced diet.
Iron can withstand pressures of around 60,000 to 75,000 pounds per square inch (psi) before it starts to deform or fail. This can vary depending on factors like the type of iron, its structure, and temperature.
If it is pure iron then by definition there is no carbon or anything else present in it, just iron.
There are three basic categories of meteorites. The easiest ones to recognize were the iron or nickel-iron meteorites; most of the others look pretty much like rocks, but before people knew how to smelt iron, nickel-iron meteorites really stood out. Another type is the stony meteorites, subdivided into chondrites and achondrites... as you might guess from the name, they're made of rock. The chondrites contain small round particles called chondrules, the achondrites don't. Finally, there are the stony-iron meteorites, which are partly rock and partly metal.
Iron ore is basically a rock that can be red, purple, yellow and gray
look at the box, or google it
the angle of the head is different. A 3 iron is not much of an angle, and a 9 iron is like at 50 degrees or so
Lots of things. If you look on the ingredient list in the back of a food label, you can see how much iron is in things.
Yes of coarse, look at a forgery (smithy). Heating up to iron's melting point of 1538°C, but much below that it becomes malleable (look at a horse farrier)
ancient cultures had to mine caves and holes to find iron like we do today. However, they did not have the tools we have today and/or the tech so it took them much, much longer to locate iron and get it out of the earth. :-)
The walls of some above ground and some inground vinyl liner pool kits are made of aluminum.
Maybe concrete that they put in pools?
if a 50 g of iron gets melted how much liquid does it produce
Iron is not dangerous to our health. Iron is a nice supplement to take in moderation. Too much iron is toxic to the body, just like too much of anything. Most notably, women can tolerate iron intake more than men can, because of their menstrual cycles depleting their iron levels.
They look pretty much like anyone else.
People putting it in.