Your question is not clear. Do you mean whether there are mountains in the sea? yes there are mountains in the sea. They are called sea mounts.
New crust
Magma from the earth travels to the surface It hardens and makes mountains. Water breaks the mountains down over a long time The small bits of rock travel down rivers and go into the sea Over time, layers of rock form, called sedimentary rocks During this time, at depth, the pressure is high and so rocks get bent and form metamorphic rocks.
Block mountains form when a fault line causes rocks to move past each other. These are also called fault mountains.
rocks
they are formed by fault block
mountains
The folding of sedimentary rocks into mountains need a great deal of crustal movement. Most sedimentary rocks form below sea level in marine enviornments. The horizontal sedimentary rocks have Tobe folded and uplifed thousands of meters to form mountains.
Mountains can form anywhere there is seismic activity, even under the sea. Some of the Hawaiian Islands are in reality the peaks of mountains!
A scientist trained in the investigation and analysis of rocks and mountains is called a geologist. Geology is the study of the earth's history as recorded in rocks.
volcanic mountains are mostly associated with igneous rocks and sedimentary rocks at their slopes can be found due to weathering,but mountains such as fold mountains can contain igneous rocks,metarmophic ro cks and even sedimentary rocks at their slopes
Mountains
Because when the two continental plates came together and it's sedimentary rocks. when were between the plates, which becomes squeezed together up to form the mountains from underneath the sea the sea creatures went up with it, which then they died and they fossilised into the rocks
the caucasus mountains
The Ural Mountains, The Ural River, and the Caspian Sea
The Ural Mountains form Europe's eastern boundary, while the Volga River is a major river in Russia that flows into the Caspian Sea, which lies to the southeast of Europe's eastern border.
The Ural Mountains, the Ural River, and the Caspian Sea form Europe's eastern boundary.
Rocks, soil, vegetation; mountains, plains, rivers and sea.