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well erosion the wind and water tare dowm and it forms mountains
mt. tounsend was formed by erosion of human soil. after that the australian plate hit the soil causing mt. townsend to form the mountain was formed millions of centuries back!
No. These are the 5 Biggest Volcanoes:1. Mount Mazama2. Mount Etna3. Mount Vesuvius4. Mount Tambora5. Mount Krakatau
The slow, orderly process of erosion, the wearing away of the planet's surface through the action of wind and water, creates canyons. The main creators of canyons is the water, not the wind, however.
Mount Cotopaxi is in the Andes mountains in Ecuador.
erosion or weathering im not sure
1,000,000 metres
12,389 ft or 3,778.6 m
Mount Fuji is a stratovolcano. However, its located at an island arc, Japan. Mount Fujis platonic environment is there for an island arc.
There are several types of weathering that affect Mount Rushmore. Rain, wind, erosion, dirt, snow, and several other things can cause it to weather.
After the eruption, with no ground cover, erosion (both wind and rain) was the main weathering agent. Most weathering is time dependent, more time, more weathering. Exposure to strong sunlight can also act as a weathering agent. Most of what could be weathered was ash and deadwood.
On Earth, all mountains have erosion.
erosion
The Park Service has a special team that repairs Mt. Rushmore because cracks develop in the rock and they have to repair it.
ice wedging
Ever since it was formed. Weathering due to erosion has been occurring since the Earth was in its infancy. Mount Everest is still being pushed up slightly (5 mm per year) as the subcontinent of India burrows beneath the Himalayas. But erosion is reducing its height by at least that much, and a 2015 earthquake may have dropped the mountain's base by as much as a meter, wiping out 200 years of increased height.
Mt. Fuji's last recorded eruption took place in late 1707. Recent tremors have given rise to speculation that it might again erupt in the near future.