English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Earth Sciences & Geology - December 2006

[Selected]: All categories Science & Mathematics Earth Sciences & Geology

2006-12-07 20:19:08 · 2 answers · asked by thesunshineking 2

2006-12-07 19:38:25 · 4 answers · asked by neal3586 1

say I float a bloon from point A at 5000 meters above sealevel and somehow maintain it constant will I be able to reach another place as the earth rotates below it ?..sounds crazy ?

2006-12-07 18:33:46 · 1 answers · asked by victor_04 2

2006-12-07 18:13:29 · 25 answers · asked by shunti 1

2006-12-07 17:46:45 · 9 answers · asked by rubiesnine 1

I think I have a ruby or possibly a pink sapphire. Does anyone know how to tell distinctively the difference between a ruby/pink sapphire and a...well rock. Also, it's about 2 pounds, and i bet about 1.3 or so is flawless. How much money would that be worth?

2006-12-07 15:23:46 · 7 answers · asked by ibanezplayer9 2

2006-12-07 14:44:38 · 23 answers · asked by Marco Franco 2

2006-12-07 14:26:51 · 6 answers · asked by DeRon R 1

How do volcanoes benefit people, plants, and animlas?

2006-12-07 14:15:00 · 7 answers · asked by Smiles 2

2006-12-07 13:29:04 · 26 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-12-07 12:47:22 · 4 answers · asked by chic_chick1994 2

2006-12-07 12:25:56 · 4 answers · asked by chic_chick1994 2

Whats its speacial name? Does it start with an 'o'?

2006-12-07 12:17:13 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous

Im putting it on a science room as if i go to a religious room the answer is forlorn. what do rational people think?

2006-12-07 11:42:34 · 5 answers · asked by the_sheik_of_sheet_lightning 3

is it water or what help me

2006-12-07 11:30:05 · 3 answers · asked by Tenisha M 1

The city has been sinking for centuries and is still sinking since it is built on top of a lake, is it possible for it , under so much weight, to at any moment collapse?

2006-12-07 10:03:13 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous

Ok, If carbon 14 has a half life of less than 6,000 years how can you determine the age of an organism that has been dead for 60,000 years? Is there still enough carbon 14 available to give an accurate reading? If not, how do you determine the age?

And also, why do so many fundamentalist christian groups like creationists pour scorn on search research?
Do they have any viable arguments to contradict evidence which, to my knowledge at least, is considered acceptable in the general scientific community?
Who is right, creationists, scientists or somewhere in between?
Thanks

2006-12-07 09:54:43 · 7 answers · asked by Melok 4

Thanks

2006-12-07 09:43:17 · 4 answers · asked by Racccchel. 4

2006-12-07 08:08:20 · 10 answers · asked by Dan H 1

i'm doing a heat saving project and i need some ideas on ways to keep conduction, convection, and radiation from taking heat away from preheated soup.

2006-12-07 08:07:17 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-12-07 07:09:58 · 8 answers · asked by Gregg P 1

2006-12-07 06:52:03 · 8 answers · asked by dynamite30 1

2006-12-07 06:49:52 · 7 answers · asked by can-d-cane 3

I have marked them with arrows. I believe they are a jasper, but which particular one. here a the link to the photo:

http://i69.photobucket.com/albums/i69/justadayinthelife/whatisitman.jpg

2006-12-07 06:35:46 · 6 answers · asked by darby_war_goddez 1

The answer will suprise you!

2006-12-07 06:27:28 · 12 answers · asked by Anonymous

Copper is used over other metals for generating electricity with magnets. Why? Are there better metals that will generate more electricity?

2006-12-07 05:51:12 · 7 answers · asked by devconx 1

2006-12-07 05:43:01 · 10 answers · asked by alin u 1

fedest.com, questions and answers