No. Because if the Grand Canyon is so many miles deep and you fell of it. You could not survive. Because you would be falling so so so fast and then no one would catch you. So if you were to survive you would have lots of broken bones and have to go to the hospital. Simple!
well it depends how long the fall is ,how you land,how fast you go. my cousin fell off a 2 story widow trying to get our cat away from the raling so it didnt fall and he broke 3 bones his arm his leg and his finger index finger so yea depends
It's technically possible to survive a 100-foot fall, but it's highly unlikely. A 50-foot fall is usually fatal, but a few people have survived falls of 100 feet or more.
camels can not survive because they need to have the climate hot to survive.camels store water in there hump cuz of the rain fall in the dessert they will not survive
In live in Ottawa, Canada. Have several yuccas who survive winter (sometimes to minus 20 F). As long as they are planted kept in high sun areas, they survive nicely and will stay dry in spring, summer and fall.
if there is something holding them in instead of skin.. or all your blood and body parts will fall out and you will die instantly
so that it will not fall down on earth :) and hit someones head! hope it helped
They get the nutrients they need from the leaves that fall from a top them. When the leave falls on top of them, it gets decomposed, and all of the nutrients go into the plant.
You could fall in.
Cold :D
A big hole, don't fall in, haha.
First, the vast majority of people who visit the Grand Canyon each year survive the trip. Since roughly 1880, over 600 people are believed to have died while visiting the Grand Canyon. That works out to only 4-5 deaths per year. A very small percentage of the annual visitors.
It's what you say when you fall into the Grand Canyon.(It can be as long as you need, ending in H if you stop before the bottom.)
You will find the most crowds in the Grand Canyon during the Summer and Fall months. Depending on what weather you can handle, March is a pretty good month to visit. The South Rim of the Grand Canyon is open year round, but the North Rim closes during Winter, due to the possible snow. You never know if it is going to snow during March, but since it includes is the Vernal Equinox, or the first day of spring, the temperatures will most likely be pleasurable because it will not be too cold or too hot.
Well the Grand Canyon is one of the natural wonders of the world, also Niagra Fall is a natural wonder.
Yes if there a is big crack or a small you can fall threw but if you are lucky you can survive.
No they would crack their head open and die
Five million people visited the park in 1997, although its buildings, roads, trails and parking areas were designed to accommodate only 1 million a year. I don't know the current number of people visting, but 1997 was I think the largest reported year for visits to the Grand Canyon.
Only one person survived but he couldn't walk again because everyone always goes feet first.
Probubly because they are scared. so they take big stomping steps. And some people are so scared they fall and cause pressure on it.