



- Icicle (yacht) is also the name of the largest Ice yacht
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Icicles — Blogs, Pictures, and more on WordPress
ICICLES — 1 comment ... February Icicles — 2 comments ... icicles ...en.wordpress.com/tag/icicles/Bicycles and Icicles
Dave Moulton's Bike Blog. Drunk Cyclist. Epic Designs. Falls Area Bicyclists. Fat Cyclist ... K-Wall Blog. Large Fella On a Bike. Life Via Bike. Linda Morgi ...alaskabikeblog.blogspot.com/ChooseRenewables.com - Blog: Icicles, cracks, gaps and other indicators...
ChooseRenewables Blog. Monday, January 28, 2008. Icicles, cracks, gaps and other indicators... your magic to eliminate icicles from forming at your own ...chooserenewables.blogspot.com/2008/01/icicles-cracks-gaps-an...icicles's favorite web sites - StumbleUpon
Discover your web with StumbleUpon. It's the best way to discover the things you like on the web.icicles.stumbleupon.com/Bella Dia: Icicles
New to your blog. Really enjoy it! These icicles crack me up, since here (in California) it was about 74 a couple of days ago. ...belladia.typepad.com/bella_dia/2006/02/icicles.html



- Icicle (yacht) is also the name of the largest Ice yacht
- Ice
- Ice dam
- Ice spike
- Rusticle
- Stalactite
An icicle is a spike of ice formed when water dripping or falling from an object freezes. Typically, icicles will form when ice or snow is melted by either sunlight or some other heat source (such as heat leaking from the interior of a heated building), and the resulting melted water runs off into an area where the ambient temperature is below the freezing point of water (0°C/32°F), causing the water to refreeze. Over time continued water runoff will cause the icicle to grow. If an icicle grows long enough to touch the ground (or its corresponding ice spike growing up from the ground) then it is called an ice column.
Icicles can pose both safety and structural dangers. Icicles that hang from an object may fall and cause damage to whatever is below them. In addition, ice deposits can be heavy. If enough icicles forms on a object, the weight of the ice can severely damage the structural integrity of the object and may cause the object to break.

























