depends on how much one pound of fat = one pound of water
if you are referring to which is more dense, water would be the answer
"...One liter of muscle would weight 1.06 kg (1060 grams) and one liter of fat would weight 0.9 kg (900 grams). In other words, muscle is about 18% denser than fat. ..." Interestingly, 1 litre of water weighs 1 kg. So muscle weighs more than water.
A teaspoon of water will be heavier. While they are both liquids, pudding will contain fat, which is less dense than water. (This is why oil and fat floats on top of water)
A pound of fat weighs the same as a pound of muscle. There is no difference. However, they do differ in density. Muscle tissue tends to be more dense than fat tissue because it has more water. This means that a muscular person would generally displace less water (have less volume) than a fat person of the same weight, and that a muscular person would weigh more than a fat person who displaces the same amount of water (equal volume).
ABOUT 70 % . (Female less, fat people less, children more.)
Butter is 80% fat, 20% water A tablespoon of butter weighs 14 grams (per USDA tables) A teaspoon of butter weighs 4.67 g and contains 3.73 g of fat, 33.5 Kcal
Yes, they do because muscle weighs more than fat.
In general, muscle weighs more than fat because of the water content in muscle. So when comparing two people of roughly equal size, the person with more muscle will weigh more.
water
water
weight lifting. remember muscle weighs more than fat.
Fat tissue is denser than other tissue. That is, per the same volume, it weighs more.
Water is heavier