yes
no it is roasted deer food
yes, deer corn is just dried out regular yellow corn. most deer corn comes from ears of corn that will not sell, like if it is deformed or possibly picked prematurely.
Yes. Marsh deer can and do eat corn.
Firstly there is no such thing as floating higher; something either floats or it doesn't. Buoyancy (pronounced boy-an-see) on the other hand, describes the ability or tendency of an object to float in a liquid. Objects float in a liquid when they are less dense than the liquid. For example an ice cube will float in both water and corn syrup because it is less dense than both. The ice cube will have greater buoyancy in corn syrup because corn syrup is more dense than water.
Wood will float in corn oil because wood is less dense than oil, causing it to float. Oil is less dense than water, so anything less dense than oil will also float in oil.
In order to float on water, the object would have to have a density of less than 1g/mL, which is stated 1gram per milliliter, not over milliliter.
Yes, gasoline can float in corn syrup due to its lower density compared to corn syrup. Gasoline is less dense than water, and since corn syrup is denser than water, gasoline will remain on top when the two are combined. This separation occurs because of the differences in their physical properties.
A toy plastic block will float at different levels in vegetable oil, water, and corn syrup due to the varying densities of these liquids. The block will float higher in vegetable oil, which is less dense than water, and may float lower in corn syrup, which is denser than both water and vegetable oil. The specific level at which the block floats depends on the density of the liquid relative to the density of the block.
corn
FLOAT
until you mix it
It's just whole corn. Often bags labeled "Deer Corn" are a little dirtier, have bits of cob and junk along with the whole corn. You see that mainly with deer corn purchased at Walmart. Feed stores often carry a higher grade of deer corn that doesn't have the trash in it, which is what you want if you're putting it in an automatic feeder. The chunks of cob tend to jam the feeders up. It's just whole corn. Often bags labeled "Deer Corn" are a little dirtier, have bits of cob and junk along with the whole corn. You see that mainly with deer corn purchased at Walmart. Feed stores often carry a higher grade of deer corn that doesn't have the trash in it, which is what you want if you're putting it in an automatic feeder. The chunks of cob tend to jam the feeders up.