The calcium carbonate present in those rocks affect the film rolls which discontinues the films or serials. The acids evaporate and fall down in condensed form along with acid rain.
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weathering of preexisting rocks form clastic sedimentary rocks, Oversaturated water basins form chemical sedimentary rocks after the water evaporates and dead sea organisms settle at the bottom forming biochemical sedimentary rocks.
Sedimentary rocks can be both chemically and mechanically weathered.
No, because a sedimentary rock is formed from pieces of other rocks.
All rocks can form from sedimentary because the rock cycle is endless.
I don't think industry have anything to do with sedimentary rocks because industry is used for goods.
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They are called clastic sedimentary rocks.
Metamorphic rocks are classified by foliation or lack there of, not sedimentary rocks. They are classified into Clastic Sedimentary, and Chemical Sedimentary.
Harvey Blatt has written: 'Origin of sedimentary rocks' -- subject(s): Rocks, Sedimentary, Sedimentary Rocks 'Petrology, Second Edition' 'America's food' -- subject(s): Environmental aspects of Agriculture, Food industry and trade, Health aspects of Food industry and trade, Agriculture 'Laboratory Exercises In Environmental Geology'
No. The rocks you describe are clastic or detrital sedimentary rocks.
Sam Boggs has written: 'Petrology of sedimentary rocks' -- subject(s): Sedimentary Rocks 'Petrology of sedimentary rocks' -- subject(s): Rocks, Sedimentary, Sedimentary Rocks
Yes all fossils occur in sedimentary rocks or rocks that began as sedimentary rocks.
Sedimentary rocks.
Clastic sedimentary rocks and Cataclasites (a form of metamorphic rock) are formed from broken rocks.
Sedimentary rocks form when they undergo metamorphism. Only if they decide NOT to be Sedimentary rocks anymore.