Want this question answered?
It either evapourates or drips down into the ground.
Here's a hint: napalm is made in a similar fashion.
The materials used come from the ground. The gasoline undergoes a change as it burns. A car uses the gasoline to move. All parts of the car are composed of chemicals.
When precipitation infiltrates the ground there is a possibility of flooding.
Nothing. CFCs are no longer used to blow such foams, so no further release of ozone depleting compounds occurs... just because you lower the octane of the gasoline, and make it burn "sooty".See "What happens to the ozone layer when styrofoam and gasoline is mixed?" in the "Related questions" section below.
Drips
from the ground.
There is no such thing as gasoline paint.
It either evapourates or drips down into the ground.
haki
figure it out genius!
nothing
New molecules are formed.
These liquids are not miscible.
you get wet uranium
Rocky and His Friends - 1959 The Ground Floor or That's Me All Over Fools Afloat or All the Drips at Sea 1-25 was released on: USA: 29 April 1960
no!!!!! gasoline is a liquid At normal temperatures no. Gasoline is a liquid refined from a thicker liquid that's drilled from the ground. However it can evaporate if not in a sealed container and become a gas.