No
120 MPH.........
They would land in the same order in which I dropped them. If I dropped them all at the same instant,then they would all land at the same instant. The same can be said for a truck, a cinder block, and a hair.
Probably a golf ball, it is a lot denser. If you dropped a golf ball on a concrete floor it would bounce, if you drop a brick it will break.
You would die!!
The heat of the lava would melt the brick, therefore destroy the building
No. A smilie is using the word 'like' or 'as'. This would be a hyperbole. (an over exaggeration of something)
It is very unlikely for a tornado to directly knock down a 5-story brick building. Tornadoes are typically capable of causing significant damage to structures, but the structural integrity of a 5-story brick building would make it highly resistant to collapse from a tornado.
Yes it's 95% out of 100% it would break
6 feet
form_title=Brick Tuckpointing form_header=7133 What would you like to tuckpoint?*= () Parts of a wall/building () Entire wall () Entire building What needs to be repaired?*= [] Cracks in mortar [] Crumbling mortar [] Holes in mortar [] Uneven bricks [] Evidence of water damage [] Need an evaluation What is the material that needs tuckpointing?*= () Brick () Stone
It depends upon a number of factors, among them being the height of the building.
Houses in Ancient Eygpt were made out of mud-brick. They would pour the crushed pebbles and reeds together and then put it in a square frame. They would let it dry in the sun and then they would start building.