6 inches would be about .6 inches of water when melted usually 1 inch of rain = 10 inches of snow
You would get about 1.2 inches of water for every foot of snow that melts.The average snow-to-water yield is 10 inches to 1 inch, but this varies considerably. Only 5 inches of "wet snow" will yield an inch of meltwater, but it takes 15 inches of dry powder.
between 10 to 20 inches of rainfall
up to 12 inches of water. depends on type of soils some water is held so tight that the roots of plants can not grab the water so that they can photosynthesis............ thanks so much for looking at my answer!!! love you sexy
If we use to much water, then we would have the water bottles polluted.
we would flood since we have a hog water supply we would flood since we have a hog water supply
Melted snow is water. Water, because it is a liquid, is hard to weigh as you normally only weigh solids. Liquids would have to be measured litres or gallons. So the answer to that question would depend on how much snow had actually melted- eg. 12% ice and 78 % is water and 10% is debris caught in the snow as it fell
.4 psi
if a 50 g of iron gets melted how much liquid does it produce
35 inches of water = 1.26 psi
You would get about 1.2 inches of water for every foot of snow that melts.The average snow-to-water yield is 10 inches to 1 inch, but this varies considerably. Only 5 inches of "wet snow" will yield an inch of meltwater, but it takes 15 inches of dry powder.
If the two polar ice caps on Mars' surface were to be melted, it would release enough water to cover the entire planet with approximately 11 meters of water.
5 inches
Quite possibly 512 cubic inches!
A real gold dollar from the 1800s would be worth at least $125 melted down, but would probably bring much more if sold to a collector. A modern Sacajawea or Presidential "golden" dollar is really made of brass. Melted down it would sell for about 15 cents!
This container could hold up to 3,949.71 US gallons of water.
10 inches of water column equals to how much gas pressure?
4 inches