When you take an ice out of the freezer, it slowly melts. But some of it re freeze by the ice itself. So the small amount of water in the cloth which is re frozen by the ice when the cloth and ice make contact produces the sticking effect.
this is a closly guarded secret and exactly why im gonna make a DVD with step by step instructions on how to increase profits thru the cutting and re-pressing process also will be selling the MAX PRESS perfect for every re-pressing needs how can i get the DVD
water... seriously though, there are companies that make BIG blocks of ice, and these are used for sculptures if you consider that ice blocks can be "stuck together" by melting them slightly, pushing them together, and re-freezing, you can make a block as big as you want
Ice lowers the freezing point of the water. so the ice will not re freeze unless the temperature drops even more.
its a kind of tribe. If you join the ice raiders tribe, you;re an ice raider
re re mi re do re re re mi re do re la la la sol sol sol re re mi re do re then repeat
Its melting, then re-solidification.
If a metamorphic rock is buried deeply in the earths' crust it comes under great pressures and temperatures. If these are great enough to re-melt the rock it ceases to be metamorphic and when it cools, it re-crystallizes into an igneous rock.
Yes. A metamorphic rock can melt and the re-solidify as an igneous rock.
No. If a rock melts and then re-solidifies, then by definition the resulting rock is igneous.
press
it has to be melted and then has to re-solidify. Heat (lots of it) to melt the rock is what is needed.