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They don't, snowshoes decrease pressure on the snow by distributing the pressure of the foot over a MUCH wider areaof the snow surface, reducing the chance of your breaking through the surface of the snow.
They don't do anything to a person's weight. What they do is allow what weight there is to be spread over a greater area, which means that the pressure on the ground is lower. With less pressure, a person doesn't sink as far into the snow.
Snowshoes, snowmobiles, walking
Snowshoes are often depicted as being similar to tennis-racquets. Their larger surface area - compared to regular boots - spreads out the wearer's weight over a greater area, putting less pressure on the snow. You can see how this works by putting a small stone (about two square inches in surface area) onto some fresh snow. The chances are that it will sink into the snow to some depth - pressing the snow more tightly as it goes down. If you put the same stone onto a piece of cardboard about four or five times the area of the stone - say about 3 inches by 3, and you will see that it doesn't sink as much, if it skins at all.The area of the snowshoe is about nine or ten times the area of the foot, so the weight of the wearer is spread over nine or ten times the area of the snow. The weight of a 200 pound man on snowshoes is distributed at about 20 pounds per foot area rather than 200 pounds per foot area of the same man without snowshoes.it helps because it has a large area so it will have small/less pressureBecause when you walk with just shoes there isn't as much surface area as snow shoes therefore you fall into it. But with snow shoes your bodyweight is spread out.Snow shoes work better in deep snow because they spread out your weight more evenly on the snow so your feet do not sink into the snow when you walk through it.
Surface area of the roof times depth of snow gives volume of snow. Take a sample of snow and weight it to determine density (since the density of snow can vary quite a bit). Density times volume equals weight.
Yes, but only by the weight of the snow shoes themselves. What snowshoes are for is to reduce pressure, not total force.
They don't, snowshoes decrease pressure on the snow by distributing the pressure of the foot over a MUCH wider areaof the snow surface, reducing the chance of your breaking through the surface of the snow.
They don't do anything to a person's weight. What they do is allow what weight there is to be spread over a greater area, which means that the pressure on the ground is lower. With less pressure, a person doesn't sink as far into the snow.
Skis and snowshoes spread a person's weight out so that they do not sink.
The spread the persons weight over a much larger surface area than just the soles of a persons foot. This enable the person to walk over the surface of fallen snow without sinking into the snow. Sinking into the snow means you get wet feet and you use up a lot of energy when you try and walk through it.
They use snowshoes to spread out their weight. Skis will also work.
Snowshoes, snowmobiles, walking
Use crampons. The snow is too hard for snowshoes.
Snowshoes spread the weight of the person over a wider area and this enables the surface of the snow to support their weight. This means that the person can walk on the surface of the snow rather than breaking through it. ----------------------------------------------------- Consider the opposite. If you had an icepick you could easily drive it deeply into the snow. It's so skinny that it wouldn't have to push much snow out of the way to penetrate the surface. The bigger it gets, the more snow gets compacted as it pushes on the surface. Eventually, the weight/area gets so low that it wouldn't penetrate at all.
For walking in snow or home decoration.
Snowshoes spread the weight of the person over a wider area and this enables the surface of the snow to support their weight. This means that the person can walk on the surface of the snow rather than breaking through it. ----------------------------------------------------- Consider the opposite. If you had an icepick you could easily drive it deeply into the snow. It's so skinny that it wouldn't have to push much snow out of the way to penetrate the surface. The bigger it gets, the more snow gets compacted as it pushes on the surface. Eventually, the weight/area gets so low that it wouldn't penetrate at all.
If you're talking about the Iditarod Race, then the ''Mushers'' would wear snowshoes.