Most dirt DOES NOT float in water. That which does, does so because it is less dense than water,
Gasoline floats on water. That is why water is not used on gasoline fires. The fire floats on the water and spreads rather than being smothered by the water.
it floats
Floats
Ice, it rises till it floats.
nope, gas floats on water
its a pretty flower that floats,and the lilly pads stay in place with the steam atached to the dirt.
First dirt, plastic, gravel are deleted by filtration. The solution is evaporated and a salt is obtained as a residue.Again add water: gravel is sedimented in water, plastic floats and both can be separated; dirt is separated by a new filtration.
When you bathe the dirt and soap floats off your skin and sticks to the side of the tub, leaving a ring when the water is drained.
Yes. It floats on water
Of course. Fresh water floats on salt water, warmer water floats on cooler water, and ice floats on any water.
It is less dense than water, therefore it floats on water.
kerosene floats on water because kerosene is less denser than water
the density of water is higher than the density of wood... & so an iron piece sinks & a ton of wood floats...
Record how high the foam floats in water.
freeze water as ice cubes then put it on water and it floats Liquid fresh water floats on salt water Warm water floats on cold water (water's greatest density is when it is 4 degrees Celsius).
The reason why ice will float in water is because ice is not as dense as water, therefore, it floats.
Yes, paper is less dense than water, so it floats.