Yes. Actually, it is a fact that no two snowflakes are the same. It is really truly amazing!
Definitely not! They are all different. If you think that is impossible then what about us no two of us are absolutely identical it's the same with snowflakes.
no, according to very studious and wise meteorolists there a no 2 flakes the same, every one of them is different
No, there are thousands of variations.
No all snow flakes are different
they are all crystals
One interesting thing is that no two snowflakes are alike. i didn't believe this, but one day I could see individual snowflakes, and each one is slightly different. Also, when you see big clumps of snow falling in a snowstorm, that is multiple snowflakes clumped together, not just one huge snowflake. All snowflakes actually have exactly six points on them.
Snowflakes don´t fall at the same time, but in different moments. It falls from the sky covering the ground turning it into a beautiful white color for winter.
Yes, snowflakes formed in the atmosphere are always white unless the atmosphere is contaminated by particles such as soot or dust. Snowflakes will then be colored by that contamination.
No, not necessarily.
Snow is cold. Snowflakes are all the same
no, like snowflakes, no two antlers are the same
No all snow flakes are different
All snowflakes are different
Snowflakes come in all different shapes and sizes just like people. No two snowflakes can ever be the same and that is a good thing because than there's more beautiful designs.
No two snowflakes will ever be the same. It is just too hard for mother nature to go through all that work to make one snowflake identical to another. I hope this helps. From: Samuel
yes i think it is the same yes i think it is the same
All snowflakes are six-sided crystals
Yes, but there are an infinite number of possible variations to the arrangement of smaller crystals. It is said that no two snowflakes are exactly alike, but many will have the same patterns and angles.
Snowflakes are ice particles formed from water droplets high in the atmosphere. All snow falls as snowflakes. Snowflakes are the winter version of rain drops. They are quite real.
First, not all snowflakes are perfectly symmetrical. In fact, the vast majority of snowflakes are asymmetrical. However they appear to be because on a microscopic scale, each side of a crystal being is such close proximity to the other will produce similar results because each molecule was formed under the same environmental conditions simultaneously.