they look like a white rock, a rough pearl looking rock.
Uzo sound like shi.t and an anoying sound ringing in your ear drum
A sea-horse has horse like head and ray type wings.
The King snake usual hides in cravases Like in rocks.
Mallards, like many other ducks are afraid of shallow clear water with an artificial bottom like black plastic. Try covering the bottom with small rocks, like river rocks - that may help.
The Grey Crowned Crane (Balearica regulorum) has a beautiful array of stiff gold feathers atop its head, which looks like a king's crown. It lives in Africa, south of the Sahara Desert.
it looks like hard rocks together
Beater pads will make the drum head last longer. So if you like the head you got, use a pad.
nope.
Tympanic membrane
fish breathe eat and move just like we do
The pieces of the drum is everywhere like the one in the tree. The account name in Frank town Rocks for me is Drybone20 my account name is crazyhamster150 the only one i no is the one at the boat on the pond and the press room at city hall in the tree
The kettle drum is a large orchestral drum similar to the Timpani. The kettle drum however has a tuning pedal that allows the player to shift the pitch of the instrument while playing by varying the head tension.
Yes. If they don't, they will suffocate and die, like if you were locked in an airtight room.
It sounds like another person hitting a different person.
You tighten or loosen the head, the drum's membrane, (very carefully). A tighter head will give a higher pitch. To avoid shearing stress on the head, you want to make sure that tension is as evenly distributed across the head as possible.
well it depends on what kind of drum you are talking about. if you are talking about a snare, the bottom head shuts off all the ringing sound and adds a surface for the springs to "buzz" up against. without it it will sound like a tom.
The snare drum is different to normal drums, as it has two skins. Under the bottom on are a series of chain-like-things. (Sorry for not being more specific). When you hit the top skin, the bottom one vibrates making the chains rattle. The snare is the "chain-like-thing" referenced above and it really isn't chain-like at all. A snare is several long, thin, metal strands with a very tight spiral pattern. They are stretched along the resonant head (bottom head) of the snare drum. The vibrations of the snare against the head produces the snare drum's signature sound. The snare can be tightened or loosened to change this sound from a sharp crack to a soft fizzle.