Depends how tall you are. but it's approximately correct
About 16 inches in Flatbush
it has 5 inches of snow
1.2 inches of snow.
For every 12 inches of snow, there would be 1 foot of snow. This is because 1 foot is equivalent to 12 inches. So, 12 inches of snow is equal to 1 foot of snow.
56 inches between beb 1 till feb 16, on feb 6 we got 25.5 inches
56 centimeters is approximately 22 inches of snow.
This will depend on how cold it is, but on average 10 inches of snow = 1 inch of rain, so 0.15 inches of rain = 1.5 inches of snow. It could be less than in inch of wet snow, or more than 2 inches of powder, however.
Snowshoe hares are 3-4 pounds, and is about 16-20 inches long across.
To find the unit rate of snow accumulation, divide the total inches of snow by the total hours. In this case, 4 inches of snow in 5 hours gives a unit rate of 4 inches ÷ 5 hours = 0.8 inches per hour. Thus, the unit rate is 0.8 inches of snow per hour.
To find the unit rate of snow accumulation, divide the total inches of snow by the total hours. In this case, 5 inches of snow over 8 hours results in a unit rate of 5 inches ÷ 8 hours = 0.625 inches per hour. Therefore, the unit rate is 0.625 inches of snow per hour.
Anual - 25.61 inches of rain (+ more than 30 inches of snow) January - 1.04 inches (+ about 10 inches of snow) February - 1.04 inches (+ about 8 inches of snow) March - 1.86 inches (+ about 3 inches of snow) April - 2.31 inches (+ possibility of snow) May - 3.24 inches June - 4.34 inches July - 4.04 inches August - 4.04 inches September - 2.69 inches October - 2.11 inches (+ several inches of snow) November - 1.94 inches (+ about 8 inches of snow) December - 1.0 inch (+ about 9 inches of snow) The average rainfall in Minnesota differs from the location of a city. In the suburbs of the Twin Cities, more rain falls.
16" x 16" = 256 square inches.