Right on, B00m. ![Dance013 :dance013: :dance013:](/data/assets/smilies/dance013.gif)
I'm not sure either, I figured it sounded like it from the wikipedia page though - "Magnesium sulfates are common minerals in geological environments." but I guess that doesn't mean in pure form.![Dunno :dunno: :dunno:](/data/assets/smilies/dunno.gif)
Edit: By the way, I found an interesting free to watch video series on microbiology. Unseen Life on Earth: An Introduction to Microbiology. It's 6 hours long though!!!
Gonna try to struggle my way through it.
![Dance013 :dance013: :dance013:](/data/assets/smilies/dance013.gif)
I'm not sure clean MgSO4 can even be made as a 100% "bio-salt"
I'm not sure either, I figured it sounded like it from the wikipedia page though - "Magnesium sulfates are common minerals in geological environments." but I guess that doesn't mean in pure form.
![Dunno :dunno: :dunno:](/data/assets/smilies/dunno.gif)
Aaaargh! I was so close to understanding this whole thing until you told me that, hahaha. Gosh, that opens so many questions, but I will give you a break and do some research myself later. Cheers man, you're a saint!BTW, It's a little more complicated than that, and only a one way rule. All organic matter contains Carbon, but not all mater containing Carbon is organic..
Like K2CO3 (potash) is inorganic and a salt. It also has to do with the structure of the molecule.
Edit: By the way, I found an interesting free to watch video series on microbiology. Unseen Life on Earth: An Introduction to Microbiology. It's 6 hours long though!!!
![Faint :faint: :faint:](/data/assets/smilies/faint.gif)
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