Copper is essential for the development of hemoglobin, and the maintaining of healthy bones and nerves. The risks of a low copper intake are tissue damage, liver damage, disease, and in incredibly rare cases death.
Too expensive, it would be stolen (as it is there are people stealing copper electrical wiring, and copper is much cheaper than gold).
Too much calcium makes the bones brittle.
your blood pressure rises
Too much water inside a cell will cause it to burst.
There is that much of it it evaporates by any source of heat
Only if you have too much of it
When the body produces too much copper
Cooper or coPPer ? Too much cOOper , then ask Cooper to get out of the pool !!
On average there are between 50 and 120 mg of copper in the body. Too much copper is not good for you. If you are double jointed or you can do a back bend you have too much copper in your body. But if you take gymnastics or something like that then your fine but almost everyone has too much copper in their bodies. If you look on the back of the food package it says how much copper there is. 2% is okay but if there's 15% then that's too much.
Copper is malleable, it can be bent and it will not break, but bending it back and forth too much may break it.
if there too little water animal die crops are not growing and if their is too much water flood came
Too expensive, it would be stolen (as it is there are people stealing copper electrical wiring, and copper is much cheaper than gold).
It might leave a copper coloured streak across the magnet, but apart from that, nothing much. I think you are looking at what happens to a copper wire when it is moved in a magnetic field. In which case the answer is, a current is induced in the wire. (It does not have to touch)
you can die
you get FAT
it can have effects on your memory
You won't be able too speak.