Want this question answered?
Yes! If you heat a bottle with hot water, the balloon would grow bigger and bigger while if you put it under cold water, you would find out that the balloon became deflated again.
The easiest way to find the volume of irregular objects is to use water displacement Fill a beaker or other container with water and place the paper clip in the water. The amount the water level rises is the volume of the paper clip. Of course because a paper clip is so small you would either need to use highly accurate measuring devices or place enough paperclips in the water that there is a noticeable change in water level. you would then divide the change in water level by the number of paperclips you put in to get the average volume of a single paper clip.
Under the Earth but occasionally it comes up in springs
That depends on what you're trying to find out. Its the manipulated variable that the scientist(you) use to compare to "normal" results. Say you're doing an experiment. You have to grow two plants, but you decide you want to find out what happens to the plant if you give it soda instead of regular water. You would get two plants and you would grow them in the same exact way except that in that experiment, you would give one soda instead of water. The variable is the one thing you changed.
The subdivision of Earth in which you find bodies of water such as lakes and ponds is the hydrosphere. The hydrosphere also includes oceans, water vapor, and glaciers.
they eat rocks dude or woman are u stupid whatecer thats the answer find me on twitter
''no way!''
rockpools
Rockpools in England have shrimp and crabs and little tiny black fish in them and insects too. In Australia they can have much more in them such as fish, bugs, snakes, spiders and crabs and much more wildlife. hope this helps you cshould also try googling it.
starfish, muscles, urchins and loads more...
people can see limpets seashells rocks and plants
Some Daily changes in a rockpool are:Water TemperatureWater levelSand level
Ponds, Rivers, Rockpools and Esturies and more places like that!
how would you find the mass of 250 mL of water
you can look in rockpools. they are mini pools of seawater which always has a suprise in it...
You would find water ice inside some of the shaded parts of craters.
You would find Euglena in fresh water but also in brackish water.