The weight would stay the same so long as the volume of water regardless of state hasn't changed.
Since ice is just frozen water it is actually good for you and you can't really eat too much water.
Their is .5% frozen water in the whole world.
there is not much water in the tundra but it is usually frozen all year.
There is some indirect evidence of frozen water on the Moon, no one can be sure of how much exactly.
The answer depends on the context: Do you want: frozen water as a percentage of all water on earth? frozen water as a percentage of all matter on earth? frozen water as a percentage of all water in the solar system, or beyond? frozen water as a percentage of all matter in the solar system, or beyond? There are other possible interpretations.
About 68.7% of the world's fresh water is stored in glaciers and ice caps, making it frozen.
If you were in a room at a temperature below 32 degrees Fahrenheit, water would be frozen into a solid called ice. Rock just happens to have a much, much higher melting point than water, so at "room temperature" (around 25 degrees Celsius) rocks are in a solid or 'frozen' form.
Just frozen water. The molecules of water have linked together to form a three dimensional matrix making it much stronger then liquid water , where the molecules roam free.
Squeeze the juice of two lemons -- the heavier the better -- into a glass of room-temperature water.
Gold is much heavier than water, as its density is around 19 times greater than that of water. This means that a given volume of gold will weigh approximately 19 times more than the same volume of water.
twice as much
Technically, none of it. The hydrosphere is the liquid water on Earth. The Cryosphere is the ice. However, only 3 percent of the water on Earth is fresh, 97 % is salt water. Of that 3 % frsh water, 85 % is frozen so 85% of 3% of the water is frozen. So, 2.55% of Earths water is frozen.