calcium carbonate
When you eat calcium carbonate, the compound is broken down in your stomach into calcium, carbon dioxide, and water. The calcium is then absorbed into your bloodstream and can help strengthen your bones and teeth. Excessive consumption of calcium carbonate can lead to side effects such as constipation, gas, or bloating.
Calcium oxide
Calcium is found in nature primarily in the form of compounds such as calcium carbonate (in limestone and marble), calcium sulfate (in gypsum), and calcium phosphate (in bones and teeth). It can also be found in various minerals and in seawater.
Calcium and its compounds are commonly used in various applications such as building materials (calcium carbonate in cement), agriculture (calcium oxide in soil pH adjustment), health supplements (calcium carbonate for bone health), and as a reducing agent in metallurgy (calcium in aluminum production).
It makes them hard and strong, in the form of the mineral "calcium carbonate".
It makes up most of your bones and much of your teeth.
Calcium carbonate makes limestone, while magnesium carbonate makes dolomite.
none
Yes, calcium carbonate is an inorganic compound. The chicken that laid the egg took the calcium carbonate from her bones and the feed she was eating to make the eggshell.
Calcium phosphate and calcium carbonate are found in bones .
No. Limestone is Calcium Carbonate. Limestone plus water makes wet calcium carbonate. With a very slight amount of calcium carbonate dissolving.
Calcium from milk makes our bones
calcium makes your bones stronger
Calcium Carbonate
calcium carbonate
Bones contain the element Calcium (Ca). It is not this element but compounds made out of this element that gives bones their strength. These compounds are calcium phosphate and calcium carbonate.