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The Big Trials-forum Quiz


trials_pimp

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Lulworth cove, Dorset...ahh the joys of geography GCSE

Q. How much wood could a wood chuck, chuck, if a wood chuck could chuck wood?

They worked it out at 35 board feet, from the amount of earth a woodchuck moves when it makes it den.

No f**king joke.

Oh, and the 5-string bass question - it's frequently EADGC now, for some weird-ass reason.

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right then as onzaboymark didnt write a question ill miss the answers and go straight for a question:

What pressure (in psi please) is a can of coke before you pull the ring pull?

part b:why are there no bubbles until the can is opened?

that should keep the googlers busy for all of five minutes.... :-

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Mauna Loa, in Hawaii.

EDIT:  You b*****d, I bet you mean "On the sun" or something don't you :huh:

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Olympus Mons, on the planet Mars.

I dominate.

Haha yes i did mean on the sun or something, well done olympus mons on mars! Good job google is free eh!

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dog thing = 56

what is snow? :(

snow.jpg

snow storm is usually the result of the warm air associated with an extratropical cyclone (as in the diagram above) flowing up and over the cold air surrounding part of the cyclone. The air being lifted, combined with the abundant water vapor available in the warm air mass, causes cloud water to keep forming. This cloud water is collected by falling ice particles, which grow as the super-cooled cloud water freezes. The ice particles in the clouds grow and combine to become so large that upward flowing air (updrafts) in the clouds can no longer support them, and they fall to the ground. The more water vapor there is available to the cloud, and the stronger the updrafts that cause this water vapor to condense into cloud water or ice particles, the more likely it is that snow will form within the cloud. A cold, cloudy day with no snow indicates that there is either not enough water vapor available to the cloud, or that the rising motion creating the cloud is not enough to cause snow (or both). (Even at temperatures as low as -40 degrees F, tiny cloud water droplets remain liquid, until they become attached to an ice particle, and then they freeze.) Snow can also form from very cold air flowing over a large ice-free lake, a situation called lake effect snow.

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