On some beaches there is no sand, on others an inch or two, on still others 20 feet or more. It just depends on the beach.
The depth of sand depends on where it is and how much of it you put there.
You need 1.35 cubic meters for each centimeter deep.
it depends on the grades of sand and how big each pebble is that makes sand.
There are a lot more types than you'd think! The white sand of tropical and subtropical settings are comprised of limestone and may have coral and shell fragments. The gypsum sand dunes of the White Sands National Monument are famous for their bright white colour.Arkose is a sandstone with lots of feldspar in it and granite rock outcrop.Some sands have chlorite, glauconite, gypsum or magnetite.Some sands come from volcanic basalts and obsidian.Many sands have iron impurities within the quartz crystals of the sand, making them appear a deep yellow colour.Some sand deposits have garnet (a type of gem) including other small gemstones.Bet you didn't know sand was so glamorous!
If you stirred water and sand together, you would have a mixture of water and sand until the sand sinks to the bottom.
The density of sand varies depending on what minerals the grains of sand are made of, and wet sand is denser than dry sand. As a rough rule of thumb, a litre of dry sand weighs about 1500 grams.
It is about 0.33 m deep.
That depends on how deep the sand is.
They live in deep seas in hte sand. They live in deep seas in under sand.
sand gets the pool dirty and the sand wiil just dissolve
no because the sand doesn't keep it in the sand so it goes deep
the sierra dessert has the most sand in fact there is 1 km deep of sand
The answer will depend on how deep a layer of sand.
An area 10 foot x 10 foot is 100 square feet. 100 cubic feet of sand would cover it with a one foot deep layer of sand. If the sand needs to be 6 inches deep, then 50 cubic feet are be needed, or 25 cubic feet if the sand is to be 3 inches thick.
This is the same reason you can lay on a bed of nails and remain unharmed. Your weight remains constant but the surface area on which you are in contact with the sand is much smaller when your standing then when your laying down. love dane and megg
In deep water in the ocean
dirt
Not to deep so your horse doesnt fall through so round about 2 inches deep