I have not ever breathed in gunpowder myself, but I would not imagine that it is dangerous to do so. After all, soldiers (or plotters) who handled gunpowder must have breathed small amounts of it in when they were using it. I doubt it is beneficial to health, but I also doubt it causes much harm. For gunpowder to explode it requires a spark; otherwise it remains fairly stable. So unless you have some sort of sparks inside our body, I doubt i will explode inside you.
Oxygen is breathed in and carbon dioxide is breathed out as it is deadly to humans. Too much carbon dioxide breathed in will cause brain damage and eventually death.
Robin Shou
Paper and gunpowder were invented by China. The Chinese used gunpowder primarily for fireworks celebrations. Paper was utilized for writing. European found gunpowder useful for weapons. Canons and hand guns used it for war and warfare became even more deadly.
Berkeley Breathed goes by Mister Breathed.
Yes a car's exhaust is deadly if breathed in a closed environment for awhile. You will get a headache and dizzy at first, these are signs that your brain is being starved for air.
78% of air breathed is nitrogen
Berkeley Breathed was born on June 21, 1957.
Berkeley Breathed was born on June 21, 1957.
an ingredient in gunpowder is sulphur
There is no specific collective noun for gunpowder, in which case, you use an appropriate noun suited to the situation a pound of gunpowder, a flask of gunpowder, a box of gunpowder, etc.
No, gunpowder is not magnetic.
If you 'inhaled' something, you breathed it in. If you 'exhaled' something, you breathed it out