> Even some things that can burn without air (e.g. magnesium) typically only burn because they are so hot that they cause H2O to separate.
I'm not positive about magnesium, but also most of them only burn because we've converted them to materials that don't exist in nature. Eg it'll only be found as oxides (ie already burnt) and then we put some energy or chemicals in to get the form we want.
If it _can_ oxidize as found in nature, there has to be some good reason it didn't already do it over ~billions of years.
I'm not positive about magnesium, but also most of them only burn because we've converted them to materials that don't exist in nature. Eg it'll only be found as oxides (ie already burnt) and then we put some energy or chemicals in to get the form we want.
If it _can_ oxidize as found in nature, there has to be some good reason it didn't already do it over ~billions of years.