There must be a finite number of ways a snowflake is made.. and given the number of snowflakes that have fallen since the dawn of time. It’s hard to imagine that there must have been at least a few duplicates.
The part I always find fascinating is that the snowflakes are hexagonally symmetrical. How does one side of the snowflake know what’s going on on the other side when it comes time to branch out or add another water molecule?
GreasyOldTam 11 months ago
What else do angels have to do?
Botulism Bob 11 months ago
And they are his better angels……
Zykoic 11 months ago
No one has proven the snowflake theory.
eromlig 11 months ago
Does anyone else suspect that the guy who told us no two snowflakes are alike was lying to us?
The Reader Premium Member 11 months ago
Come on, you guy have all eternity!
PraiseofFolly 11 months ago
An efficiency expert would advise “the myriad of angels” form an assembly line.
phritzg Premium Member 11 months ago
They needn’t worry. The humans are heating up their planet, and pretty soon the snow flake making angels will be looking for something else to do.
uniquename 11 months ago
Not making them exactly alike is easy. Just be sloppy.
PraiseofFolly 11 months ago
I thought that was Suzy Snowflake’s job.
https://m.youtube.Com/watch?v=xaUBpsn4QjQ
MarkZuck 11 months ago
My flight was canceled one Christmas and the airline put me up in a large hotel. It was empty and the restaurant was closed.
flemmingo 11 months ago
Who looked at snowflakes to make that determination? Nothing else to do?
InTraining Premium Member 11 months ago
Why not set up a Quality Control Department to avoid a duplicate…?
Old Time Tales 11 months ago
Don’t worry, Clarence. It’s all automatic. Their uniqueness and individuality is built right in.
Alberta Oil Premium Member 11 months ago
There must be a finite number of ways a snowflake is made.. and given the number of snowflakes that have fallen since the dawn of time. It’s hard to imagine that there must have been at least a few duplicates.
Richard S Russell Premium Member 11 months ago
The part I always find fascinating is that the snowflakes are hexagonally symmetrical. How does one side of the snowflake know what’s going on on the other side when it comes time to branch out or add another water molecule?
cuzinron47 11 months ago
I wouldn’t worry about it, it’s not anybody is gonna check.
T... 11 months ago
Da Big Guy don got no halo, only the plebe workers…
tcviii Premium Member 11 months ago
There were no halos until they were added by he painters in the middle ages as a type of identification.