1. When you step on really cold, stiff ice crystals, the jagged edges rub abruptly against one another. Think of it sort of like a cricket rubbing the barbed edges of its legs together. As snow warms, it may become a bit more flexible, and loose water molecules in the snow may lubricate it, so the squeak goes away.
2.Another possible explanation is that the pressure of stepping on the air-filled snowflakes rapidly expels the air and produces the characteristic squeak, sort of like a very small, high-pitched whoopie cushion.
It's the very tiny screams of all the snowflakes you're killing with your big ass foot of death.
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