It depends on where the glass was found and what kind of weathering occured upon it.
A small sherry glass would be approx 55 mm tall.
What type of volcano irrupt quickly creating a hill made of many small pieces of hardened lava
Mainly because the process of tampering increases the strength of glass (by 200% to 400%) thereby reducing it's risk of breakage. Then also, in the unlikely event of a breakage, one type of tampered glass shatters into many small fragments to reduce the risk of injury and damage to other property. Another type breaks into linear fragments that may still remain safely in frame. Tampered or toughened glass therefore addresses the need for superior stength and safety in the use of glass.
Yes, meteoroids are basically small pieces space debris that are considerably smaller than asteroids. They're so small that many of them simply burn up in the atmosphere before ever reaching the surface.
A glass bottle can take thousands of years to decompose naturally, with estimates ranging from 1,000 to 4,000 years. Unlike organic materials, glass does not biodegrade but instead breaks down into smaller pieces over time. Recycling glass is a more sustainable option, as it can be reused indefinitely without losing quality.
Words that mean to break into many small pieces include disintegrate, catabolise, decompose, digest, pulverize, fracture.
Break or cause to break suddenly and violently into pieces. - John Anav
If you break a peice of glass, many peices of glass from that one piece willfall. There are many pieces but it's still glass!
Shattered means to break into many pieces. When you dropped the glass on the cement floor it shattered.
To smash or shatter something into many small fragments with a loud noise.
One of the small pieces, or splinters, into which a brittle thing is broken by sudden violence; -- generally used in the plural., A thin slice; a shive., A variety of blue slate., A sheave or small wheel in a pulley., A small wedge, as for fastening the bolt of a window shutter., A spindle., To break into many small pieces, or splinters; to shatter; to dash to pieces by a blow; as, to shiver a glass goblet., To separate suddenly into many small pieces or parts; to be shattered., To tremble; to vibrate; to quiver; to shake, as from cold or fear., To cause to shake or tremble, as a sail, by steering close to the wind., The act of shivering or trembling.
Just one if you break it into small enough pieces. (see related question)
Two
Lisp in Small Pieces has 514 pages.
Glass is actually made out of small particles of sand. Gravity pulls on these pieces of sand and after many years, can make the window seem uneven and inconsistent.
The flute is in three pieces but it's made out of many many small pieces.
Yes, the glass during glass blowing can break if the worker isn't careful. Whether it breaks depends on many factors, such as temperature of the material, how thinly the glass is blown, and skill of the glass blower.