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GCSE Chemistry Practice Test: Limestone Reactions - Use as a Building Material
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Avg score: 61% Most missed: “Limestone is made into cement by heating with powdered clay. Cement can be mixed…”
Limestone is an abundant rock that can be used for a number of purposes. It was formed millions of years ago on the bed of relatively shallow tropical seas. It consists mainly of the mineral calcium carbonate which comes from two sources - shells and precipitation from seawater. There are many types of limestone, some hard, some soft. Rain is naturally slightly acidic because it contains dissolved carbon dioxide which forms a weak acid with water. Carbonates are one of the substances that react with both strong and weak acids, so slowly, over millions of years, rain will dissolve limestone to... Show more
GCSE Chemistry Practice Test: Limestone Reactions - Use as a Building Material
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10 Questions

1. Limestone is sometimes spread on fields and lakes. Why?
2. What type of rock is limestone?
3. Limestone is made into cement by heating with powdered clay. Cement can be mixed with water, sand and crushed rock. What building material does this produce?
4. Which of the following is NOT an advantage that concrete has over raw limestone as a building material?
5. Which of the following is NOT an advantage of using limestone as a building material?
6. Which of the following is NOT a direct use for limestone?
7. Pick the correct combination of negative aspects of quarrying for limestone.
8. Limestone is a fairly common rock in the UK. How was it formed?
9. Cement is mixed with sand and water to produce...
10. Powdered limestone can be heated to very high temperatures with sand and sodium carbonate to make another building material. This is called...