Hardened rocks are not considered to be alive, and living beings (prisoners) break them into smaller rocks, so, yes, they do.
yes but some times no
Yes, non-living things can affect living things. For example, environmental factors like temperature, sunlight, and air quality can have a significant impact on the health and behavior of living organisms. Additionally, non-living things like pollution or habitat destruction can harm or endanger living species.
newtest3 newdiv
The non living environment provides nutrition and protection for living things.
ecosystem :V
Living things that can affect monkeys include predators, competitors for resources, and disease-carrying organisms. Non-living things such as habitat loss, climate change, and pollution can also have a significant impact on monkey populations.
No, unless vibrations by sound will break items.
living things move while non living things not
non-living things move by magic
moutains affect living things
Well non living things such as volcanic eruptions let out enourmous amounts of Co2 which can damadge the atmosphere.Other ways are cars,motors,and that's basically it.
Weather has a huge impact on non-living things. A place that has a lot of rain will likely erode rocks in the area for example.