Salt melts ice.
sprinkle salt on it and it will poisin it
Sprinkling salt on icy roads doesn't warm up the ice. What it does is depress the freezing point of water to the point where the ice is too warm to be solid, even though it is just as cold as before.
Road salt, often potassium chloride (KCl) lowers the freezing point of water, so during weather where normally water would be frozen on the roads, the roads are ice-free.
Ice has a freezing point which is generally 32 degrees and when salt is put onto frozen water it turns it into liquid. When it turns into liquid it's no longer frozen as long as the salt remains present.
Because they think if they will not sprinkle salt then ghosts will come on the stage
The Salt Roads was created in 2003.
The Salt Roads has 394 pages.
When cement is frozen it shrinks. the salt adds heat and it expands. The cement is not used to the change and it expands to much and it cracks. just like when paper rips. =============================== I have a different mechanism to propose: -- Salt on the surface of the frozen rock melts the fine layer of ice on the rock, just as it does when salt is used on the roads or sidewalks. -- The liquid water seeps into microscopic cracks in the cement. -- When the water re-freezes, it expands, cracking the cement.
The ISBN of The Salt Roads is 0-446-53302-5.
Salt is scattered on a frozen surface to melt the ice.
cause roads taste like salt
salt melts all ice thus clearing the roads for transport