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[–] 0 pt (edited )

Do you disagree that there are dissolved metals in water? How do you think it got there? Water dissolves metal to some extent. It reaches an equilibrium. Extremely hypotonic water will dissolve metal faster. Gold is not very soluble.

You know that rain is basically distilled water. So if water in a creek can have dissolved metals in it treat that as the result of an integral. If it was initially zero then at some point the derivative had to be non-zero. That means that water dissolves metals.

Sorry to have to break it down to that level.

[–] -2 pt

Extremely hypotonic water will dissolve metal faster. .... water in a creek can have dissolved metals in it treat that as the result of an integral.... at some point the derivative had to be non-zero.

Dude, do us all a favor and stop fucking talking.

[–] -1 pt

You my friend are genuinely retarded.

Metals are ranked by something called activity. All metals have activity. The most active metals dissolve instantly and dramatically in any kind of water, such as sodium and potassium. They trade places with hydrogen in that process.

Because all metals have activity all metals engage in this process to some extent.

You are easily the most retarded person I've met on poal. Maybe lay off the sauce.

[–] -1 pt (edited )

Thanks for the tip, buddy. Maybe I should quit making an ass of myself on the internet? Or get hypotonic with an integral derivative in a creek.