When wood is burned to ash, that ash is mainly carbon. I'm pretty sure it's just carbon. Carbon is in everything and it doesn't burn very well so that's why it's left over from when you burn something.
ashes and black powder stuff. NOT COAL
Burnt Wood to cook and heat their houses.
heat and oxygen are produced when it is burnt. if my answer is wrong call me on 07734 940264
The handle is either wood or plastic - both of which are good heat insulators - preventing the user from being burnt.
Decaying leaves mixed into dirt with a hand full of earthworms would be far better as fertilizer than burnt leaves. Burnt leaves would contain a high level of carbon but no cellulose. Mulch of leaves, grasses, soil, and earthworms would be better than burnt leaves because it'd be easier for the nutrients to leech into the soil.
Burnt wood is essentially sterilized carbon. That won't hurt your dog, with one exception: If the "burnt wood" is burned lumber that was pressure treated, yes, it could poison your dog. But a burnt tree limb, or log of ordinary fire wood? No.
carbonised wood is burnt wood, and is usually black.
The main benefit from wood ash is Potash.
Ash
It is undergoing a physical change from wood to ash.
yes, it is a chemical reaction
coal is made when you burn coal
A burnt piece of wood
ashes and black powder stuff. NOT COAL
.........Particulate matter........
Particulate matter
The Call of the Wood was created in 1995.