Quotation from: General Science

Written by: Bertha M. Clark


While most of us are familiar with the bursting of water pipes on a
cold night, few of us realize the influence which freezing water
exerts on the character of the land around us.


Water sinks into the ground and, on the approach of winter, freezes,
expanding about one tenth of its volume; the expanding ice pushes the
earth aside, the force in some cases being sufficient to dislodge even
huge rocks. In the early days in New England it was said by the
farmers that "rocks grew," because fields cleared of stones in the
fall became rock covered with the approach of spring; the rocks and
stones hidden underground and unseen in the fall were forced to the
surface by the winter's expansion. We have all seen fence posts and
bricks pushed out of place because of the heaving of the soil beneath
them. Often householders must relay their pavements and walks because
of the damage done by freezing water.

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