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Im not sure but I think 3.
Yes. Many of the Earths large rivers carry water from melting snow.
Snow is solid water - H2O; of course snow contain many impurities.
snow is cold water.
If you are referring to "man made snow" found at many ski hills or corn snow (because of its shape) it is made from water. If the water is coming from a stream, river or a pond it is run through a filter to prevent clogging the snow gun but whatever is in the water is in the snow, so don't eat the snow.
Take it to the snowplow truck that is parked to the right of the School. The driver will say he needs exactly 4 liters from the 10 liter bottle. For this, you will need Sweaty's dog dish from Rodrick's room in Greg's house.When you use the fluid, fill the dog dish (3 liters) from the 10 liter bottle, then pour the dog dish into the 5 liter cup. When you fill the dog dish again (another 3 liters), you will have 4 liters left in the bottle.You bring it to the guy with the snow plow and then pour it into the dog bowl. Once it's in the dog bowl pour that into the cup. Then pour more into the dog bowl and 4 ounces will be left in the original container.
No, snow is a water solid.
Snow is water, frozen water crystals.
It is estimated that 10 to 12 inches of snow melts to about 1 inch of water, which is 1/10 to 1/12 of its original volume. 1 cubic foot of snow would melt down to between 144 (12 x 12 x 12 / 12) and 172.8 (12 x 12 x 12 / 10) cubic inches of water. 144 cubic inches = 2.36 liters and 172.8 cubic inches = 2.83 liters. 1 U.S. gallon = 3.7854 liters, so 1 cubic foot of snow would melt down to between (2.36/3.7854) and (2.83/3.7854) gallons, or about 5/8 to 3/4 of a gallon of water.
Yes. Snow is made out of many molecules of water. Water is the combination of two atoms of hydrogen and one atom of Oxygen (H2O).
No, snow is just water.
no - snow is all water and nothing else