It isn't clear what sort of radiation you are talking about. If you mean infrared radiation, if the temperature is the same, darker objects do tend to emit more radiation.
Fire,.
dirt
it depends. Water pressure can effect the weight.
No, because mud is a mixture of water and dirt, which is denser than water, so the average density is greater than water. However, water tends to mix with mud, which may give the illusion that it is more dense.
water melons and dirt He did not have inventions as such, he made discoveries and formulated new theories
This answer will vary depending on what type of dirt it is, if it is a yard high, or a yard long, or whether there are particles in the dirt that will cause it to be heavier, such as water. But a normal yard high of dirt and I am assuming this as if it is a yard long and high, would be about ten to twenty pounds. This is answered off of the top of my head, so don't think it as 100% correct. Hope I helped you well enough!
no
They tends to block incoming solar radiation, thereby cooling the surface. They don't really impact Earth's longwave radiation.
you drain the water and the water will fall out and the dirt will stay in the drainer?
Rocks are denser than dirt, and dirt is denser than water
dirt
Most dirt DOES NOT float in water. That which does, does so because it is less dense than water,
Sun Dirt Water was created on 2007-09-01.
it is DIRT
You put the dirt in the water, then you make a hoe and use it on the dirt
The phrase "caked on dirt" usually means that wet dirt has gotten on an object or person and dried and it is now caked on and cracking. Essentially, if something has caked on dirt, it is very dirty!
Removed the gold from the dirt. The gold is heavier than dirt, so water is poured over the shovel of dirt and the water washes away the dirt leaving gold flakes.
dirt and poop will get into the egg, causing it to develop an odor.