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The black precipitate usually sink to the bottom which the reaction took place in. The reaction takes place at the bottom because it only occurs under anaerobic conditions, and it does not sink to the bottom as it only occurs at the bottom, not around oxygen at the top of the tube.
The puddle is a small reservoir of water. The sun's heat evaporates water from the puddle. The water from the puddle turns into water vapour, helps to form clouds, etc.
When poured into water glycerol also a liquid falls to the bottom of the beaker
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As the puddle dries out, the water is changed from a liquid into a water vapour. The vapour will be blown away by the wind.
Salt sink in water only for a short time because is denser than water; after this salt is dissolved in water.
The rain does technically sink , but 75% of the world is water.
fish
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The black precipitate usually sink to the bottom which the reaction took place in. The reaction takes place at the bottom because it only occurs under anaerobic conditions, and it does not sink to the bottom as it only occurs at the bottom, not around oxygen at the top of the tube.
Sand has a higher density than water, so it sinks to the bottom when placed in water due to gravity pulling it down. The sand particles are heavier and more compact than water molecules, causing them to settle at the bottom.
The puddle is a small reservoir of water. The sun's heat evaporates water from the puddle. The water from the puddle turns into water vapour, helps to form clouds, etc.
The puddle is a small reservoir of water. The sun's heat evaporates water from the puddle. The water from the puddle turns into water vapour, helps to form clouds, etc.
The puddle is a small reservoir of water. The sun's heat evaporates water from the puddle. The water from the puddle turns into water vapour, helps to form clouds, etc.
The puddle is a small reservoir of water. The sun's heat evaporates water from the puddle. The water from the puddle turns into water vapour, helps to form clouds, etc.
Salty, cold water I think...
Yes, because water is heavier then gasoline