Whats is a chemical change of a paper bag

Answers

Answer 1
Answer: Burning it. That causes a chemical reaction. 
Answer 2
Answer: Combustion will cause a chemical change in paper.

This is because the carbon compounds are being oxidized into carbon dioxide and water vapour (or h2o, same thing).




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Why would it be difficult to date an item that was only 12 years old using carbon dating?

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Because it is simply to young to use carbon dating, carbon dating is only used for things thousands to millions of years old.
Some people can get confused with carbon dating. Most people think it is used to show the age of a fossil or a rock. The rocks and fossils are called "inorganic matter" it is called that because it is not a living thing if it was a living thing then it would be called "organic matter". Carbon dating is usually only useful for organic matter that is less than 3-5,000 years old.I'm not sure if this helped but I hope you get the answer.

Which of the following is NOT an example of a watershed?Select one:
a. Santee River Basin
b. Edisto River Basin
c. Pee Dee Watershed
d. The Atlantic Ocean
Check

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The answer to this question is A

How can you increase and decrease the viscosity of a liquid?

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you can increase and decrease the viscosity of liquids by raising or lowering the temperature

Please help solving number 48.

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a magnet can attract cobalt and nickel but not aluminum nor copper

Freezing and thawing of water can cause A.erosion B.weathering C. flooding D.deposition

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the answer is b weathering 

Please help meeeee!!!!!!!There is a big push right now in trying to rely on nonrenewable resources for the majority of our energy needs. Should we even try to power the world with 100% renewable resources? Justify your reasoning

Answers

Answer: Non-renewable energy comes from sources that will run out or will not be replenished in our lifetimes—or even in many, many lifetimes.

Most non-renewable energy sources are fossil fuels: coal, petroleum, and natural gas. Carbon is the main element in fossil fuels. For this reason, the time period that fossil fuels formed (about 360-300 million years ago) is called the Carboniferous Period.

All fossil fuels formed in a similar way. Hundreds of millions of years ago, even before the dinosaurs, Earth had a different landscape. It was covered with wide, shallow seas and swampy forests.

Plants, algae, and plankton grew in these ancient wetlands. They absorbed sunlight and created energy through photosynthesis. When they died, the organisms drifted to the bottom of the sea or lake. There was energy stored in the plants and animals when they died.

Over time, the dead plants were crushed under the seabed. Rocks and other sediment piled on top of them, creating high heat and pressure underground. In this environment, the plant and animal remains eventually turned into fossil fuels (coal, natural gas, and petroleum). Today, there are huge underground pockets (called reservoirs) of these non-renewable sources of energy all over the world.

Advantages and Disadvantages

Fossil fuels are a valuable source of energy. They are relatively inexpensive to extract. They can also be stored, piped, or shipped anywhere in the world.

However, burning fossil fuels is harmful for the environment. When coal and oil are burned, they release particles that can pollute the air, water, and land. Some of these particles are caught and set aside, but many of them are released into the air.

Burning fossil fuels also upsets Earth’s “carbon budget,” which balances the carbon in the ocean, earth, and air. When fossil fuels are combusted (heated), they release carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Carbon dioxide is a gas that keeps heat in Earth’s atmosphere, a process called the “greenhouse effect.” The greenhouse effect is necessary to life on Earth, but relies on a balanced carbon budget.

The carbon in fossil fuels has been sequestered, or stored, underground for millions of years. By removing this sequestered carbon from the earth and releasing it into the atmosphere, Earth’s carbon budget is out of balance. This contributes to temperatures rising faster than organisms can adapt.