Stalactite
Stalactites hang from the ceiling of a cave. These mineral formations are created by dripping water depositing minerals over time, gradually forming icicle-like structures that hang from the cave roof.
yes,Stalagmites do hang from the roof . Stalagtites come up from the ground.:)
I think you are asking about Stalactites and Stalagmites respectively: both precipitations of calcite. If they meet the result is called a Column.
No, a stalagmite forms on the cave floor when mineral-rich water drips and deposits sediment, creating a mound-like structure. On the other hand, a stalactite hangs from the cave's ceiling as mineral deposits accumulate and form a tapering, icicle-like shape.
The roof of a cave is referred to as the "ceiling" or "overhang".
Stalactites are the ones that hang from the roof; the ones that grow up from the floor are called stalagmites.
Stalactites form at the roof of the cave. These are mineral deposits that hang from the ceiling and are typically made of calcium carbonate. They form as water containing dissolved minerals drips from the roof and the minerals gradually accumulate over time, creating the elongated formations known as stalactites.
stalagmites are on the cave floor, stalactites are on the cave roof. stalagmites are mighty like Hercules, they hold the ceiling up. +++ An easy mnemonic: "c for ceiling, g for ground". Another is "Stalagmites might reach the roof [and sometimes do, forming a 'column'] and stalactites hang on tight."
Stalactites are cave structures that hang from the cavern roof. They are formed by mineral deposits left behind as water drips from the ceiling, slowly depositing calcite or other minerals and creating icicle-like formations.
A sinkhole is formed when the roof of a cave collapses.
One grows up from the cave floor, the other hangs down from the cave roof. To remember which is which:-A "stalagmite" might reach the the top (grows up from the cave floor).A "stalactite" has to hang on "tight" (hangs down from the cave roof).+++Another one is "G for Ground, C for Ceiling". Their location is the only difference; they are both formations of precipitated calcite (calcium carbonate).
It depends on where the cave was...