Nowhere as poison is not a chemical
In chemical factories,hospitals
No, poison ivy is not native to China. It is typically found in North America.
Giving some to whatever you're trying to poison and seeing if it dies. It's more a biological experiment than a chemical one.
Nicotine is found in tobacco, as well as in certain herbicide and insecticides.
Enzymes reduce the activation energy of a reaction. They accomplish this feat by altering the local chemical environment of the substrates while typically bringing the reactants into close proximity and even stabilizing conformers that promote reaction.
The chemical in poison ivy, poison oak, and poison sumac that causes allergic reactions is called urushiol. It is a resin oil found in the sap of these plants and can trigger skin irritation and rashes in individuals who come into contact with it.
Yes, Poison is A chemical.
Yes. Arsenic. It's the toxin once found in rat poison, insecticide, and chemical weapons.
In chemical factories,hospitals
Eating them is bad for you because they contain a chemical found in poison Ivy-Urushiol
poison
No
The poison had a chemical reaction to my body
Yes. Because the enzyme released by the cassava are turned into cyanide. A poisonous substance that can be fatal.
Treatment of a particular poison depends on the identity of the poison and how the poison was absorbed into the body.
This is the use of a poison.
No, poison is not a chemical property. Poison refers to the harmful effects a substance can have on living organisms, while chemical properties describe how a substance behaves in chemical reactions, such as reactivity, flammability, and toxicity.