ANSWERS: 4
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Snow is made of ice crystals. Ice crystals have six points. One snowflake can consist of multiple crystals. There are gaps between the points of a crystal that are empty, except for air. When snow falls to the ground, air is trapped inside of that layer of snow. You have probably noticed that when snow is stepped on, it gets compressed. The air gets pushed out of the snow. The sound you hear could be the sound of the ice crystals as they break. Try it with ice cubes. They make a crunching sound when they are broken. Also, on a sunny day, the surface layer of snow can melt, due to thermal heating. When the sun goes down and temperatures drop, that top layer refreezes into a thin crust of ice. If you step on it, you are breaking that top crust, resulting in a "crunching" sound. The crunching sound is less related to temperature and more related to the structure of the snow. The older the snow, the more compacted and icy it becomes. Source: NSIDC researcher, Richard Armstrong, April 2002
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perhaps because snow likes sounding like chips or beetles
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The surface will melt and fuse together forming a frozen crust. When you walk on it, you break the crust, making a crunchy sound.
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because it is frozen?
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