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They are both scopes and they can see threw them and some of them have one eye hole
You cannot measure the luster of a rock. Instead, you have to determine it by examining the rock closely and basing it on light reflections.
The name for the type of pigeon you see all over cities is the Rock Pigeon. It's scientific name is "Columba livia".
with your eyes
No. Just like the planets and their moons, you can only see a comet when the sun shines on it ... just as you have to shine a flashlight on a rock in order to see it at night. The sun is the only thing in our solar system that makes its own light.
No it is a heavy, magnetic and very dark grey rock, which is also known as Lodestone.
they are see threw so they let the sun come in
pumiceThe type of igneous rock that floats is called Pumice. It isn't lighter than other rocks, just less dense because it has lots of very small air bubbles trapped in it. You can see these if you look at the exterior of the rock.
They are both scopes and they can see threw them and some of them have one eye hole
If you can light up a rock at night with a flashlight, or see the houseacross the street by the light of the sun, then apparently it can.
Metals are not the only things that reflect light. Can you see anything around you that is not metal? You see it because it is reflecting light.
Paramore is the name of a brilliant rock band.We went to see a rock band last weekend.
look at the title closely hold it to the light if you don't see your state stamp threw it then its been tampered with or if you don't see small print threw the paper then you got a problem
No. They are just small bits of dust, dirt, rock or ice that burn up as they enter the Earth's atmosphere which we see as a meteor. The light you see is it being burned, not a reflection of light.
That's right. But the sun shines on them and lights them up. The same reason you can see a rock in a dark room when you shine a flashlight on it, even though the rock does not produce light.
You cannot measure the luster of a rock. Instead, you have to determine it by examining the rock closely and basing it on light reflections.
If an object doesn't reflect light, it will appear perfectly black. So yes, in a sense, a rock does reflect light, since this is what enables you to see it. It is, however, a poor reflector, compared with, say, water, or a mirror. If an object doesn't reflect light, it will appear perfectly black. So yes, in a sense, a rock does reflect light, since this is what enables you to see it. It is, however, a poor reflector, compared with, say, water, or a mirror.