Yes it can be destroyd because people throw stones and put chemicals in the water tha cannot been seen so yes water can be destroyd!
terrorists
Sevral earthquakes
Don't count on it ---- That's right ........ it won't!
it made a shortege of food becuse it destroyd farms
stab them in the heart with a wood stake no. you need to rip there lims apart and burn them to get rid of them for sure.
a third party destroyd a shipping line they told the zoffs the fuzzians did it and vice versa
Though the mega weapon has been destroyd the ninja must face a new enemy
because the elves making te coins decided that they were tired of bieng nice and they destroyd them to make it hard to get perfect change at a shop
Bears like honey and ants destroy all what comes on em way,old tecnic is destroyd angry been is smoke and those start to move away and you may destrod em home.
Pompeii was destroyed by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD. The eruption buried the city under several meters of volcanic ash and pumice, preserving it remarkably well over the centuries.
Itz quiet easy all you have to do for the scene rock w.e u call it look aka destroyd jeans sand it with sand paper easy as.for color itz a w.e w.e color u want mabe faded will u house hold bleach and colorful ness clohing die hope this helps :)
The most likely scenario for the evolution of all amphibia, vertebrate animals who live partly in and partly outside the water, is the following: At some time, all vertebrates were aquatic animals, spending all of their lives submerged in water. A combination of competition, scarcity of resources and predation would have caused groups of vertebrates to adapt first to seeking out ever shallower waters, and eventually even venturing out of the waters for periods of time - for instance for mating, reproducing or food gathering. Thus ambhibia would have evolved. Some subset of these early amphibia would then have adapted even further, spending more and more time on land, eventually leaving the water altogether. From these groups have evolved all modern land-dwelling vertebrates.