A soft, silvery metal that burns in air and reacts with water. It is used to make special glass for televisions, but it is best known as the brilliant reds its salts give to fireworks and flares. Because it is very like calcium, it can mimic its way into our bodies, ending up in our bones. Radioactive strontium-90, which is produced in nuclear explosions and released during nuclear plant accidents, is particularly worrying because it can be absorbed into the bones of young children.
Sunday, June 13, 2010
Requirements for next week
Bio 2 - Research on the different types of tissues
May link na ba sa SS slides? :D
ReplyDeletewait. lagay ko narin dito.
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