No, England will not sink, and, the icecaps probably won't melt, if the recent blasts of frigid weather are any indication.
Ice can't sink hunny :) It is less dense then water (density= 1.0) and therefore, it can only float, not ever sink.
Yes, when glaciers melt, they contribute to rising sea levels rather than causing the land underneath to sink. The weight of the ice depresses the land beneath, and when it melts, the land gradually rebounds over time in a process known as isostatic rebound.
If ice cubes are put in kerosene, the ice will melt due to the higher temperature of the kerosene. Kerosene has a lower freezing point than water, so it will not freeze the water in the ice cubes. The ice will eventually melt and mix with the kerosene, but they will not chemically react with each other.
The water would freeze, ice would SINK to the bottom. More water would freeze and ice would sink to the bottom again. Eventually the entire lake, river, stream, sea and ocean would be solid ice. All (or virtually all) life would cease in the waters.
sink
Let it melt !
No, Cuba is not going to sink.
Ice floats and melts in your drink
The water may not be going down the sink due to a clog in the drain pipe, a blockage in the plumbing system, or a malfunction in the sink's drainage mechanism.
yes
The water in the sink may not be going down because there is a clog in the drain, preventing the water from flowing through.
yes
sink allied supply ships to England
march 18 at night
The lutsiana
This is a physical change. Chemical changes are changes in "what things are made out of".
Try it mcguyver