snow, rainfall, not the snow from ice rinks, hail, ice
the spring snow melt and the river discharged and they were uncontrolable
No. Because 200 degrees Celsius is 392 degrees Fahrenheit, which is 228 degrees Fahrenheit lower than the 620 degrees Fahrenheit required to melt the lead.
the hottest planet is not the planet nearest to the sun, which is mercury. it is venus, the second nearest. it is very hot on venus because, unlike mercury, venus has an atmosphere. the atmosphere acts rather like the windows in a greenhouse, and helps to heat the surface of the planet. the temperature there is about 900 degrees, which i shot enough to melt several metals.
Sort of depends on what you mean melt. It will melt/burn when high heat is applied to it. And it will melt if there is moisture in the air for it react with.
It depends what it's made of. Normal ceramic is unlikely to melt but would probably crack. Steel might melt in an extremely hot fire. Plastics would melt.
In the spring the snow melts sending huge amounts of water flowing down the mountain in streams and rivers.
Cyclical
Rivers flood in the spring, after snow accumulated over the winter begins to melt. Rivers also flood after heavy rain events.
I have never tried to melt Irish Spring, but I have tried to melt Dove. When I tried to melt it, it became this huge bubbly thing. It did not melt at all.
Usually the snow cap on a mountain will melt in warm weather, either that or it will build up and eventually avalanche down.
Yes. The melting point of lead is 327.46 °C. The temperature of lava is definitely greater than that. hence it can melt lead.
Usually snow melt from mountains at the beginning of the river.
they can feel the snow melt
Lead (or anything else) is melted by heat. There are various chemicals that can be used to produce heat. For example, a propane torch can melt lead.
Because he would melt in the spring.
Snow melt runoff is the water runoff after the snow melts usually in the spring.
Snow melt runoff is the water runoff after the snow melts usually in the spring.