Want this question answered?
when a volcano erupts it will take time for crystals to bloom and come to life
Crystals are found in all countries.
Crystals come on by igneous rocks. Igneous rocks were heated up by lava. Then the rocks cooled and broke. Inside them were crystals.
You may be referring to snow. If you come from a climate where you have never seen it, it is water vapor frozen into whitish-colored ice crystals, and in winter, it falls in flakes onto the ground.
Because oil and water do not mix unless you have an emulsifier
when a volcano erupts it will take time for crystals to bloom and come to life
cold water
/
Snow forms when water vapor in the atmosphere freezes into ice crystals. These ice crystals then come together to form snowflakes. When enough snowflakes accumulate, they fall to the ground as snow.
You will get some back pressure from the water heater. It will come out of either the hot or cold. Shut the tank off if there is a shut off there.
yes but he is having surgury then he'll come back.
I think it's because salt dissolves better in hot water than cold water, so as the solution cools the salt wants to come out of solution and crystallize. When you pour the solution over the sponge, this causes the liquid to evaporate. This further concentrates the salt so that it will crystallize. The salt crystals will start to form on undissolved salt or on the sponge. Once the crystals start forming, they grow fairly rapidly...
Not being able to see the pipe and not knowing where it is, it's kind of hard to know. If it is a cold water line and you have not shut off the hot water tank, the pressure from the hot water will back flow and hot water will come out of the cold side.
alligators can't breath under water. they have lungs. so yes they do come out of the water when its cold. it's just common scene.
The aerator to the cold taps may be jammed, otherwise check to see that the cold water valve is switched on.
yes. Salt Crystals can be moved by water, ice or wind and can come ashore.
No. The pores are the openings of the sweat glands. In heat you sweat and so open the pores. In cold you do the opposite.