because water in oceans and seas is salty
An example of conservation of mass is simply cutting up a cookie into pieces. Even though you now have more pieces, it still has the same amount of mass (how much matter is made of the cookie) as you did when it was all in one piece. :)
itm has ice in it which causes the sea to cool down so it turns the air colder, so the rain is colder which makes everything it lands on colder :) hope this helpped geo dude!
Any time an experiment isn't quantitative, you don't need exact masses. Generally though, three significant digits makes a good rule of thumb for accuracy.
No nobody has ever seen an atom or atoms, though many people/scientists claim they have, NOBODY HAS EVER SEEN AN ATOM!
Yes,the planet Earth as water surrounded it
If you're asking why we use dams and man made lakes, it's because that way the part of the land that is far inland doesn't need to transfer the water from the edge of the land where the ocean is. If you're asking why do we need to conserve water if we have so much of it. Well, have you ever tried drinking ocean water?
Sometimes it is; though not often.
Nope, but hes had MASSES of accidents though.
There are not two oceans that meet in Mexico. The Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea meet on Mexico's east side though.
Though they have same volume,they have different masses.
Rudolf Clausius, a German mathematician and physicist formulated the law of conservation of energy clearly. Though William Rankine mentioned it but he did not formulate it as clearly as Clausius did.
Yes,They are found in the coastal regions of Indo-Pacific oceans. They are primarily marine, though some species are known to live in rivers.
F = G((m1*m2)/(r^2)) where G=6.67×10^(−11) Nm2/kg2 (a constant) and m1 = the mass of the first mass and m2 = the mass of the second mass and r = the distance between the masses ...not sure the color of the masses matters, though
Icebergs are in the oceans, though they are located nearer to the top section of Earth, where it is colder and they can last.
fossils
1972 Environmental Science merit badge; replacing1970 Conservation of Natural Resources; replacing1965 Soil and Water Conservation; replacing1958 Forestry or Soil and Water Conservation or Wildlife Management
The International Dateline passes through the Pacific and Southern Oceans.