Water’s density is greatest at about 4 °C (39.2 °F), in the liquid phase. Ice, water’s solid phase, is more buoyant, so it forms at the surface of water bodies and freezes downward. Lakes and rivers rarely freeze completely, and the liquid water below can become a winter refuge for aquatic life. When ice melts in the spring, the slowly warming surface meltwater sinks, displacing the water below and mixing nutrients throughout the water column.
water Article
When is water the most dense?
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