Can you drown in it?
>>8902828
No.
>>8902828
Probably not. Would you like to test my hypotheses, OP?
>>8902828
Stick your head in it, and inhale deeply.
Pretty sure there's no way to survive that.
So, yes.
>>8902828
Drowning can come from several reasons.
Either it is directly by a lack of breathable oxygen (as there is no O2 in water), but it is also due to fluid overvolume the lungs (in fresh water) or fluid overvolume in the body (salt water). This is because water is not directly corrosive or toxic to the body, allowing it to accumulate in a way that eventually deforms normal cell structure.
Lava would just burn you. Since its high temperature is directly harming to cells, it would kill you because of that.
>>8902828
Why does lava look so delicious?
>>8902923
It makes me hungry for cheese
>>8902828
Lava is melted rock. Your body (basically water) would hardly dent it. Only your head is denser than rock. Emphasis: "your."
>>8902987
Not entirely correct. Although you're undoubtedly wrong about it being rock and what physical traits rock has, in a liquid volume you can still penetrate it and hell if you had some sort of advanced equipment, swim in it. It'd be really ducking dense, but not too dense to enter.
>Sorry, not a postgrad or anything, just a welder who melts down steel and aluminum quite frequently, so don't quote me.
Geologist here. I suggest trying to breathe very mafic lava like from Hawaii because of its low viscosity. You can probably drink it at that viscosity (albeit once), breathing it is doubtful. But you can sure as hell try.
Hypothetical question. You could technically drown in it but realisticly itd be the intense heat not lack of being able to breathe that would kill you
>>8903026
Try swimming in a pool of concrete. It's less dense than pure rock, having some water in it. You would hardly dent it.
I guess it depends on what your definition of "drown" is. Can you cup some up and shove it your face and clog your tubes? Well, I guess, but I imagined the question was more like, would you sink into it and be overwhelmed by it?
Come to think of it.... yes. There's proof. There are concrete workers buried in the concrete of the Hoover dam. But that stuff fell on the victims. They didn't fall in and sink.
All this of course, nevermind the heat factor.
>>8903104
>clog your tubes
Clog your mom's tubes.
>>8903183
hahaha epic scientific comment buddy!
is this board always as informative as this?
>>8903069
>You could technically drown in
It would be too thick, you couldn't draw it into your lungs.
>>8903026
You're like 1/3 as dense as rock. If you could ignore the heat, you would totally sit on top of it, with most of your body sitting above the surface of the lava.
>>8902828
Better question:
If lava was a sauce/spread, what flavour would it have?
I'm betting my virginity that it would taste like a salty, strong ajvar.
>>8902828
Being inside lava would kill you via heat before you'd have a chance to drown.
>>8903512
Salty milk and pennies.
>>8902923
it's obviously orange flavoured
Lava=molten rocks, rocks are denser than human body is this what you asked OP?
why don't you go and test it?
>>8902838
>there is no o2 in water
Bruh.... Fish are a thing you know.
>>8902828
No, it doesn't act like the movies. It's completely nonfatal.
>>8902838
Isn't drowning specific to a liquid filling your lungs, preventing you from breathing?
Isn't a lack of breathable oxygen just suffocation?
>>8902828
No too dense, you will burn to death then your flesh will melt and become one with the magma.
>>8903622
O2 specifically refers to oxygen in its diatomic gas state
>>8902828
Lava isn't a liquid. You could suffocate, but not inhale it.
>>8903104
Lava turns out to have about the same density as concrete:
http://www.madsci.org/posts/archives/1999-11/943417499.Es.r.html
http://hypertextbook.com/facts/1999/KatrinaJones.shtml
Lava tends to be very dense but it does exhibit shear thinning properties. As this video demonstrates a jug of water disappears into the lava after impacting:
https://youtu.be/lDxOhfiFsuc
However, even if one survived such an impact one is probably going to get cooked before drowning becomes a problem. In pompeii air temperatures of 300 degrees C were enough to kill people in a fraction of a second: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2010/11/101102/pompeii-mount-vesuvius-science-died-instantly-heat-bodies/
>>8905170
oxygen dissolved in water is still diatomic, doofus.
>>8902828
In order to drown in lava, you would first have to get submersed in it and survive long enough to suffocate. So no, you can't drown in lava.
>>8905170
Are you a retard?