In general, yes- and with MUCH greater accuracy.
Crockett had a rifle, which he called Old Betsy. A rifle has spiral grooves inside the barrel, which make the bullet spin when it is fired out of the barrel. In the same way a quarterback tries to spin the football when throwing a pass, this made the bullet fired from a rifle much more accurate than those fired from a musket. A musket is a smooth-bore weapon - no grooves inside the barrel, therefore no spin on the bullet. A musket shot is more like a knuckleball in baseball - no spin, liable to go anywhere, even a puff of wind can change its course, and musket balls do not have as long a range as rifle balls. As far as I know some Mexican wound up with Crockett's rifle after he died at the Alamo in 1836. Photography had not yet been invented.
a ball can go further than grass and dirt
Kinda depends on how long of a distance you had in mind. The Remington 700 is a great rifle, and, depending on cartridge, it can reach out and touch something at 1000 metres. If you need to go further than that, a .50 rifle, like the MacMillan Tac-50, Barret M82, Barret M95, etc. might be more to your liking.
The assault rifle that can go through almost all elements other than fire is SA80.
many people go further than moon but that is somany of them
Farther for physical distance and further for a figurative distance... I am going farther than this, meaning for more miles yet I can not go any further than this, meaning I stop here, can not go on
If your psa level is lower than 4.0 ng/mL, then you dont need to go for further testing. If it is higher than that then you should go for further testing.
You are NOT supposed to put the ramrod back into the barrel if you want to fire the musket. It would go back in its slot.
It means that one is going further than average.
no
Scientists can now go further than Darwin because we have newer equipment and all of the knowledge of Darwin through his book, The Origin of Species.
The moon doesn't actually go further north in some years than in others. Sometimes the moon appears closer or further away because of its location in its orbit around the Earth.