Re: What Carole doesn't Know.
- From: carole <hubbca2003@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 14 Jan 2011 21:05:37 -0800 (PST)
On Jan 15, 1:52 pm, Bob Officer <-*-*.@.*-*-> wrote:
On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 16:07:05 -0800 (PST), in misc.health.alternative,
carole <hubbca2...@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Jan 15, 12:27 am, Bob Officer <-*-*.@.*-*-> wrote:
On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 04:40:33 -0800 (PST), in misc.health.alternative,
carole <hubbca2...@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Jan 14, 6:43 am, Bob Officer <-*-*.@.*-*-> wrote:
I take it you've done some chemistry and so the volatility of certain
compounds wouldn't be news to you.
I found no evidence to support you claims.
Potassium and sodium are examples of two chemicals that are volatile
when mixed together.
Potassium and sodium do not exist in the native elemental form.. the
are always in compound with other elements either as simple/complex
hydroxyl or oxides. That is because they are considered highly
reactive. Sort of the same reason Elemental Aluminum isn't found in
nature, it is highly reactive. Most light metals (sodium and
potassium are considered metals) are highly reactive. the lighter the
metal or gas the more reactive it generally happens to be.
highly reactive ...especially when mixed with water?Sodium and potassium mixed with water, dingbat.
I rest my case.
bob officer is an idiot.
</cite>
Why don't you keep these comments within the threads in which they
reside, idiot?
OK Carole I took this out of the other thread because it needed to be
address. you are ignorant to the point it has become stupidity. you
sit and type in medical and health advice and are too stupid to even
understand what you are talking about most of the time.
Typo bob - should have been "addressED"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potassium
"Elemental potassium does not occur in nature because it reacts
violently with water (see section Precautions below). As various
compounds, potassium makes up about 1.5% of the weight of the Earth's
crust and is the seventh most abundant element."
Explain to me why elemental potassium doesn't occur in nature?
Because it is highly reactive. It reacts with just about water, free
oxygen, iodine, chorine, sulfur and hydrogen. I could get technical
and try to explain valence bounds and ionic bounds. But that is
elementary chemistry and to go beyond that point would take math,
which you seem to hate Because it is in fact technical.
How about this cite bob -
http://creationwiki.org/Potassium
"Potassium is the seventh most reactive metal in the world. It is
difficult to find in its metal form because it reacts so violently
with water. The potassium salts like carnallite, langbeinite,
polyhalite, and sylvite are found in ancient lake and sea beds."
Note "difficult to find" not "impossible to find".
Now do you want to eat your words?
Its a good thing you have a job where the technical details are fixed
because its all you're capable of - ie absorbing information and
regurgitating it.
--
Carole
www.conspiracee.com
"The unaware are unaware that they are unaware." Merril M.E. Jenkins
Sr
.
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