No, it can't/
An egg sinks in fresh water because its density is higher than that of water. The weight of the egg overcomes the buoyant force exerted by the water, causing it to sink.
Silicon will sink in water because it has a higher density than water.
It's called Reelfoot Lake is Northwest TN. I hope that's the one you're looking for.
Asphalt is denser than water and will sink in water rather than float.
A basic answer is that the densest ocean water is the saltiest - a ship floats higher in salt water (sea) than in fresh water (lake). Also cold water tends to sink towards the ocean floor, or may form a layer mid way.
fresh water
i think it is ppeople because they float in salt water and sink in fresh water.
Fresh water...
In fresh water a human is more dense than the water around him or her causing them to sink slowly. In salt lake the water is more dense than the human because of the fact that it has salt in it causing the human to float. Also have you ever noticed that if you fill your lungs with air the in fresh water you will float, but if you fully deflate your lungs you will sink? pretty cool huh?
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no
Salt water is denser than fresh.
If you just barely float in salt water, you will sink in fresh water.
An object would sink faster in salt water because salt water is denser than fresh water. The higher density in salt water creates more buoyant force, allowing objects to sink faster than in fresh water.
It depends on the density of the object. If an object is denser than fresh water, it will sink. If it is less dense than the fresh water, it will float.
An egg sinks in fresh water because its density is higher than that of water. The weight of the egg overcomes the buoyant force exerted by the water, causing it to sink.
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