egg shels
yes because it id a natural element and you would get it and make milk out of it
No, lithium is very reactive metal and you would expect it find it as one of the ions ion present in minerals.
Pure calcium is hard to find. But things like oyster shells have calcium in them.
Calcium is commonly found in milk and milk products
what do you expeat to find in calcium chloride in ocean water
Hydrogen is an extremely abundant element and can be found just about everywhere. In its diatomic elemental form, hydrogen can be found in the atmosphere as well as in stars. However, it is a moderately reactive element and can be found in molecules ranging from water (hydrogen dioxide) to nucleic acids.
Yes, this is essentially correct. We don't find chlorine in nature in an uncombined state, but when we make chlorine gas, it appears as the diatomic molecule Cl2.
In nature, Argon is a gas
Calcium has been around for longer then man or animal so it would be hard to find out when ti was discovered
The noble gases generally exist in nature in monoatomic form. Some metals are unreactive enough to exist in nature as pure "nuggets" of metal; gold is probably the most notable, but there are places where one can find nuggets of (nearly) pure copper as well.
yes. because calcium is almost never found in nature due to its high reactivity with water, but we can find copper metal in nature.
There are many kinds of information that one could find at the website Nature's Miracle. The biggest things that someone would find at Nature's Miracle would be things for one's pets.