Fun Stuff
Crayola™ Color Coolerz!® are fun for the whole family!
Ways to have fun with Crayola™ Color Coolerz!®
Freeze them! Crayola™ Color Coolerz!® make a great frozen summer treat! Try using some popsicle molds in fun shapes and pour in your favorite flavors. Let sit in the freezer overnight and then enjoy fun and nutritious Crayola™ Color Coolerz!® popsicles!
Use them as party favors. Tie helium baloons to them and use as place holders at tables or just around your party space. Kids will love grabbing a baloon and finding a tasty Crayola™ Color Coolerz!® drink at the end of the string!
25 Fun Facts About Water
- 80 percent of the earth's surface is water. The total amount of water on the earth is about 326 million cubic miles of water.
- 97 percent of the earth's water is seawater.
- 2 percent of the earth's water supply is locked in icecaps and glaciers.
- Only 1 percent of the earth's water is available for drinking. Of all the water on the earth, humans can use only about three tenths of a percent of this water. Such usable water is found in groundwater aquifers, rivers, and freshwater lakes.
- If all the world's water were fit into a gallon jug, the fresh water available for us to use would equal only about one tablespoon.
- The worlds largest (surface area) freshwater lake is Lake Superior (North America) with an area of 32,000 sq. miles (82,103 sq. km).
- The deepest and oldest lake in the world is Lake Baikal (Siberia) at 6,365 ft. (1,940 m) deep and 25 million years old. Lake Baikal holds one-fifth of the earth's available fresh water.
- Water is the only substance found on earth in three forms: solid, liquid, and gas.
- The Earth is a "closed system". This means that there is the same amount of water on earth now as there was when the earth was formed. Just think, you could be drinking the same water molecules that a dinosaur drank!
- Water regulates the earth's temperature.
- Water also regulates your body's temperature.
- Frozen water is 9% lighter than water, which is why ice floats on water.
- Water removes waste from the human body.
- Water dissolves more substances than any other liquid.
- The average person in the United States uses 80 to 100 gallons of water each day. Flushing the toilet actually takes up the largest amount of this water.
- During medieval times a person used only 5 gallons per day. Of course they didn't have flush toilets.
- Americans use five times the amount of water that Europeans use.
- The average five-minute shower takes between 15 to 25 gallons of water.
- A dairy cow must drink four gallons of water to produce one gallon of milk.
- A chicken holds more water for its size than an elephant. 75% of a chicken is water. 70% of an elephant is water.
- A watermelon holds less water for its size than a tomato. 92% of a watermelon is water. 95% of a tomato is water.
- Fresh, uncompacted snow is usually 90-95 percent trapped air.
- A human can live more than a month without food but only as much as one week without water.
- 300 million gallons of water are needed to produce a single day's supply of U.S. newsprint.
- The recommended amount of water is eight cups per day, from all sources. Nearly every food or drink item provides some water to the body.
American Tap Water
It's important to always remember just how precious water is, and that we need to do everything we can to conserve and protect our water resources. We are very lucky in the United States to have such an abundance of good water, especially when you consider that a quarter of the world's population is without safe drinking water.
- Only 1% of the Earth's water is fresh water available for humans to drink (97% of the Earth's water is salt water, 2% is frozen).
- The U.S. has fresh water resources totaling about 660 trillion gallons.
- Americans tap into about 341 billion gallons of those resources every day.
- Of the amount withdrawn in the U.S., only 1% is used for drinking water. About 41% is used for agriculture, 39% for hydroelectric power, 6% for industrial use and 6% is used for household purposes.
- There are 54,000 community water systems in the U.S. They provide about 90% of Americans with their tap water.
- About 3,000 of these community systems provide more than 75% of the nation's water.
- 80% of those community water providers are municipally owned. 20% are investor-owned.
- According to a survey conducted by AWWA, 82% of large water utilities have their own water laboratories on site.
- Water utilities monitor for more than 100 contaminants on a regular basis.
- More than 94% of American water utilities are in full compliance with health-based federal regulations annually.
- Every year, water utilities provide their customers with detailed information about the quality of their drinking water, the contaminants found in the nation's source water, the treatment techniques used to remove them, and the parties most likely to be responsible for contaminating the water initially.
- Water utilities contribute millions of dollars every year to independent research efforts and research partnerships with U.S. EPA and other interested parties.
Available at Select Walmart Supercenters Find Stores
Connect with us!