The ground freezes, then the ground in cold enough for the snowflakes to freeze to it.
Because if you don't squeeze it, it won't fit together and it will be a pile of snowflakes. You can't really make a snowball/ball if you don't squeeze it. If do it will just crinkle up and break.
yes they do they stick to others as they are falling but they dont grow after falling
One interesting thing is that no two snowflakes are alike. i didn't believe this, but one day I could see individual snowflakes, and each one is slightly different. Also, when you see big clumps of snow falling in a snowstorm, that is multiple snowflakes clumped together, not just one huge snowflake. All snowflakes actually have exactly six points on them.
No, snowflakes do not continue to grow once they touch the ground. Once they land, they can be further compacted by footsteps or other forces, but they do not continue to accumulate additional ice crystals.
Because the snowflakes will melt more as the air gets closer to freezing, which allows them to "stick" together as they fall and grow larger.
The ground freezes, then the ground in cold enough for the snowflakes to freeze to it.
Snowflakes are always combining and splitting apart as they fall. The wetter they are, the more likely they are to merge together.
Snowflakes are not actually inportant. Snowflakes are actually bunched up together to make snow. If you want to ask more questions email me on josephinelum99@yahoo.co.uk
Because if you don't squeeze it, it won't fit together and it will be a pile of snowflakes. You can't really make a snowball/ball if you don't squeeze it. If do it will just crinkle up and break.
Sleet .
yes they do they stick to others as they are falling but they dont grow after falling
One interesting thing is that no two snowflakes are alike. i didn't believe this, but one day I could see individual snowflakes, and each one is slightly different. Also, when you see big clumps of snow falling in a snowstorm, that is multiple snowflakes clumped together, not just one huge snowflake. All snowflakes actually have exactly six points on them.
They can be, but the many who say they aren't are putting two and two together and making five.
yes they do like to stick together
snowflakes are natural
No, snowflakes are water that has frozen in a certain way that forms snowflakes. But they have oxygen in them.