48idk
100% of the contents of the oceans is made up of elements.
The question is ambiguous.Do you mean:what percentage of all girls on earth are in Canada, orwhat percentage of Canada's population is girls?The question is ambiguous.Do you mean:what percentage of all girls on earth are in Canada, orwhat percentage of Canada's population is girls?The question is ambiguous.Do you mean:what percentage of all girls on earth are in Canada, orwhat percentage of Canada's population is girls?The question is ambiguous.Do you mean:what percentage of all girls on earth are in Canada, orwhat percentage of Canada's population is girls?
100% to the nearest whole percentage.
The graph that best represents the percentage by volume of the elements in Earth's troposphere would typically be a pie chart. This is because the troposphere is primarily composed of nitrogen (about 78%) and oxygen (about 21%), with trace amounts of argon, carbon dioxide, and other gases. A pie chart effectively illustrates the proportional relationships between these gases, clearly showing the dominance of nitrogen and oxygen.
78 %
Oxygen
Silicon and calcium
Please see this link.
silicon
oxygen (o) 15.999 and silicon (sl) 28,088
silicon
the solid Earth,Earth's oceans,Earth's atmosphere, andorganisms on Earth
The two elements that commonly occur within the earth crust are Oxygen and Silicon.
because these 4 elements that are listed are the most common elements on planet earth. most percentage of the eart is made of there 4 elements but not all some elments like iron are also there but a extremly small percentage
Iron, nickel, and small amounts of lighter elements.
Earth would have to be the hardest of the Aristotelean Elements as it is the only solid one.
Yes, chemical elements can move through all of these reservoirs as part of the Earth's biogeochemical cycle: I. the solid Earth, II. Earth's oceans, III. Earth's atmosphere, and IV. organisms on Earth. Each reservoir plays a role in storing and exchanging elements through different processes like weathering, erosion, biological uptake, and volcanic activity.