goes faster thru gravel sice the interparticulate spaces are high water can flow in large amounts swiftly. but since sand particles are closely packed it is impossible & result a dull slow flow and im brian
yes because sand has smaller particles then gravel, which allows the heat to sink through and become trapped, where as the gravel has larger air cracks where heat ca come in but in can also escape
Gravel is more permeable. Then sand, then clay.
YES... And even more, by violent windstorm.
sandy soil
Air is a compound, as you cannot see the seperate things that make up air. A mixture is something you can visibly tell apart, like gravel and sand, you can tell the chunks of rock in the gravel from the particulites of sand.
shake, stir, or heat up the water
the lightning heats up the sand causing the silica in the sand to melt causing natural glassthese are called "fulgurites". and yes, this is awesome.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fulgurite____________What happens in the above answer occurs when HEAT strikes sand, not lightning (although lightning has extreme heat, this is not the correct answer). Sand is considered "ground" if you are touching sand during a thunderstorm you are grounded.(: Hey!!
well if you do it then paper burns MUCH faster than plastic...Thanks.
Soy Candles burn faster than beeswax. It takes beeswax a little bit longer to heat up.
The sand will heat up faster.
sand heats faster because it absorbs heat faster than water!!!!!!
sand heats faster than soil
No. Sand and gravel are two different terms for describing sediment size. Gravel is a size up from sand.
Iron has the lowest specific heat, so it will heat up faster.
As with just about everything, the sun will heat dark-coloured sand faster than light coloured sand. Dark colours absorb heat better than light colours.
Metal is a good conductor of heat while sand is an insulator. Therefore heat will spread throughout a piece of metal faster than it will through an equivalent weight of sand.
Soil heats up faster than sand because soil is more moist and has certain chemical in it so that it is partially flammable. I hope ive helped! Love, 2016127
Soil
Because of the minerals inside it are able to warm up faster in heat.
The desert will heat up faster than a lake. The sand particles have greater thermal conductivity and hence will take up heat faster than water molecules which do not take up heat as easily. It is also the reason why it is cooler at the sea side.
They're both silicon, so there shouldn't be any difference. Sand might stack up more tightly than gravel though.