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southern MN | I was wondering about that too, technically freezing is when a substance changes from liquid to solid. Dirt is mostly a granular, with perhaps various very, very high melting/ freezing points.
When we talk about ground freezing we are wrong from the beginning, it is the water in the ground that is freezing and what we mean.
So, not sure where that leaves us.
Other than we mean, when the dirt turns 32F. And this conversation might be interesting to some nerds, and frustrating to others who know what they mean and don't care about such silliness. :)
Paul | |
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