twigs are small. this gives twigs a high ratio of oxygen- to- fuel. this carburation effect, as long as the twig is dry, will permit the twig to flare up and burn up quickly and reach high combustion temperature more rapidly than a large specimen of wood, as the twig has relatively more surface area exposed to the air. so it will briefly add heat and flames to any existing fire.
Australopithecus lived around 4 million years ago in Africa, and is known as one of the ancestors of humans. To answer your question, maybe the twig provided the possibility for the discovery of fire? Australopithecus were not known for tool-making, so I would assume that the twig was useful for discovering fire.
Because that is what the Dry powder (or Dry Chem.) is made for.
Twig is a noun.
Twig has one syllable.
Twig is Zweig in German.
If it's a C02 powered system then yes you can dry fire it. If it's a spring powered system the NO do not dry fire it. It will damage the system.
no it does not
I broke a few TWIGS from a tree I made wands out of TWIGS I love TWIGS Twigs went down the slide WHAT DO U WANT TO KNOW DUDE???
twig's race is a elf
The Lime Twig was created in 1961.
Twig the Fairy was created in 2010.
dry cooking fire grease fire and oven fire