The temperature of the deep seas is -1°c to 4°c. It's near freezing. Saltwater freezes at -1.8°c.
Not very deep, by the beach water gets as deep as 20 feet.
(1 mile)3 x (5,280 feet per mile)3 x (12 inches per foot)3 / (231 cubic inches per gallon) =1,101,117,147,428.57 gallonsor 1.10112 trillion gallons (rounded)
it is 1 mile long
The Colorado river gradually eroded the rocks, cutting the deep gorge we see today.
The answer will depend on how deep (how far from the road) the frontage extends.
about 1 mile deep.
a canyon
35 feet
what are the different advantages of mile-wide deep curriculum?
About 2,360 pounds per square inch (psi) or 163 bar.
They are 2300 feet down. It's somewhere in the 80 degree Fahrenheit range for temperature. 5280 feet = 1 mile
Not very deep, by the beach water gets as deep as 20 feet.
about 12500 feet (3800 meters).
From what I've found It was aprox 41 milesthat would put it 29 miles outside the us 12 mile limitand into "International Water's"
The water cools the local air temperature.
The temperature of boiling water is about 100 °C (212 °F) . But keep in mind that the temperature varies depending on the altitude at which the water is boiled and also the local barometric pressure. For example, in a city that is one mile above sea level where the barometric pressure is, say, 29.92, the water will boil at a temperature of just 202.6 F.
lake baikal its in Russia and is almost one mile deep and has more fresh water than all American lakes combined