Your question isn't the most clear, but I think your answer is rocks, or more specifically phosphorous rich rocks because the phosphorous will mix with the sediments on the river's/lake's ground forming phosphorous rich rocks.
That means that It'll become a phosphate mineral and later become phosphorous again when the minerals weather.
Hope it helped,
BioTeacher101
Mario sets up an experiment to determine the source of the oxygen gas produced by photosynthesis. To determine this, he uses an isotope of oxygen called O-18. He labels the O-18 oxygen so he can follow its path through photosynthesis. Plant A is given carbon dioxide that contains the O-18 isotope. Plant B is given water that contains the O-18 isotope. When he examines the oxygen from both plants, only plant B produced O-18 oxygen. This indicates that the source of oxygen is water. The photosynthesis involves the transfer of electrons between the photosystem I and II. The water gets split into oxygen, hydrogen ions and electrons in the photosystem I. The electrons move to the photosystem II where the carbon fixation into sugars takes place. The plant A will have O-18 isotope in its synthesised sugar molecule, which gets stored inside it.
That statement is True
Gas giants refer to the large planets the made up from large composition of gas.
These planets are located significantly further from the sun compared to another planet, which makes them have more debris left over from their formation, which will turn either into rings or moons (satellites) that surround these planets.
Because people and animals exhale carbon dioxide which plants need and they release oxygen