mostly solid, but part liquid
Yes, water can occur in actually all three phases: gas, liquid, and solid. Solid water would be a glacier, ice, hail, etc.
By definition a mineral must be solid. Ice is solid. Water is not.
A glacier is an example of a solid that flows, albeit very slowly.
A glacier is made up of ice, a solid, but the ice flows, melts, and recrystallizes regularly.
Solid
a feather is a solid
If water is found as a glacier, it is in the solid phase. Glaciers are massive sheets of ice formed from compressed snow over many years.
No, a solid is a solid and a gas is a gas. They are two separate states of matter.
Changing directly from a gas to a solid is called deposition.Changing directly from a solid to a gas is called sublimation.
The first 20 elements at room temperature are: Hydrogen - gas Helium - gas Lithium - solid Beryllium - solid Boron - solid Carbon - solid Nitrogen - gas Oxygen - gas Fluorine - gas Neon - gas Sodium - solid Magnesium - solid Aluminum - solid Silicon - solid Phosphorus - solid Sulfur - solid Chlorine - gas Argon - gas Potassium - solid Calcium - solid
Platinum is a solid.
Changing from a solid to a gas is called sublimation, where a solid directly transitions to a gas without passing through the liquid phase. The reverse process, changing from a gas to a solid, is called deposition, where a gas transforms directly into a solid without becoming a liquid.