Hail
Your hair begins growing from a root in the bottom of the follicle. The root is made up of cells of protein. Blood from the blood vessels in your scalp feeds the root, which creates more cells and makes the hair grow. The hair gets pushed up through the skin as it grows, passing an oil gland along the way.
An oak tree.
Any plant that grows in marshyconditions, or in shallow water
agaricus grows on forest or lawn floor
It grows faster in room temperature
A rain cloud typically appears dark and thick with a gray or bluish color. It may cover a large portion of the sky and often has a flat or layered shape. As raindrops accumulate within the cloud, it grows larger and denser, eventually leading to precipitation.
A polar bear
Straight across with no layers! This way the hair grows even and your not waiting for layers to grow in.
Insects have one germ band that grows. There are three germ layers which can be found on most insects and are responsible for development.
It grows from seed on the soil that is pushed over the pile of trash in the land fill.
Aquatic turtles molt. They do this by shedding scutes or layers of shell as the body of the turtle grows.
no because the earth grows from the layers made by the core
Evany Cloud wants to be a famous singer/songwriter, and an actress. But, she's probably going to become famous before she grows up because she has a music video that's on youtube. She's also on itunes, CD Baby, and AmazonMP3. I love her songs! They rock!
Silver maple bark peels off in thin, papery layers because the tree grows quickly and the outer bark cannot keep up with the expansion of the inner layers, causing it to shed in strips.
It grows in layers because of the amount of sunlight reaching each part of the forest. Since the emergents are the highest they receive the most amount of sunlight and hence the top layer. As the layers decrease so does the amount of sunlight and hence different heights of the rainforest.
Hail pellets get bigger through a process called accretion, where supercooled water droplets in a thunderstorm freeze onto a hailstone as it is lifted and falls through the storm multiple times. The hailstone grows as more water freezes onto it, creating layers of ice. The stronger the updrafts in the storm, the more times the hailstone is lifted and falls through the storm, allowing it to accumulate more ice and grow in size.
No, once a snowflake falls out of the cloud, it no longer grows. The size of a snowflake is determined by the conditions it experiences while still in the cloud, such as temperature and humidity.