It all depends on how deep the hole it's in is. It could be just over a meter, or it could be deeper than 5 feet.
If you are referring to the depth it varies from less than one to many thousands As a note, Mariana Trench is about 12 kilometers deep meaning more than 36,000 feet. More than the height of Mount Everest.
18
No it's the same
If you are 2000 feet in the air, alone in a glider or on a parachute, you are more than 6 feet away from a rat.
Yes 2 yards is greater than 5 feet. 1 yard = 36 inches ... 1 feet = 12 inches
Quite possibly, yes. Quicksand can appear anywhere with sand and water, and often appears near the beach. Quicksand doesn't often appear the way that you see in movies however. Normal quicksand depends on water saturation levels and the conditions in the area. A place where quicksand appeared last week might not be quicksand any longer if it is drier or if someone dug up the area. You also don't just sink in without moving. You actually only sink if you struggle, and many times patches of quicksand are not as large as you are, and will only catch your foot. Usually, quicksand is not very deep either, rarely more than a few feet deep. Usually, if you watch where you are walking, and test the stability of any area that looks marshy or soupy, you should be okay.
Yes it can but not the whole body. Quicksand is more boyant in quicksand than in water. You will be stuck but your whole body will not be sucked down
Quicksand involves water cohesion and density. You sink in quicksand because you are more dense than the sand-water mixture. No chemical reactions are involved.
It is more than 4 thousand feet approx 7.3 miles deep
no if you are smaller than four feet then its deep for you if you are over four feet its not that deep so then you can touch the ground.
More than 2,000 feet; nearly 700m underground.
The Ganges River: average depth 52 feet (16 m), and the maximum depth, 100 feet (30 m).
Quicksand is made of wet, mucky sand. It is usually found in jungles, where the water from the soil gets into deep sand. It then gets the sand overly saturated, so when you step in it, you sink as if your pool had just a little sand in it. There is more water than sand, so you sink like in water, not like in sand.
If you are referring to the depth it varies from less than one to many thousands As a note, Mariana Trench is about 12 kilometers deep meaning more than 36,000 feet. More than the height of Mount Everest.
Anything over 80 feet is considered a deep well. A jet pump can pump up from 80 feet, more than that needs a submersible pump.
Women do not inherently struggle in quicksand more than men. The struggles in quicksand are mainly due to its physical properties - the more a person moves or struggles, the deeper they sink. Factors such as body weight, clothing, and panic reactions can affect a person's ability to stay afloat.
18 cubic feet of topsoil Bob Richardson Orlando, FL 18 Cubic Feet, assuming the question meant 12" deep, which is more likely than 12 "feet" deep