Shale rocks are formed in the deep waters of swaps, oceans and lakes where the water is still and the fine clay and silt particles are able to settle to the floor. Shale rocks can easily erode due to weathering.
Because sandstone has wider particles than shale and this let's the water through.
The sediments that eventually formed the rock shale were generally still water clay and mud particles.
They erode sediments when it snakes back and forth across their valley. xxxJoanna
by water, wind, and gravity moving it
The rocks erode and cause sedimentary rocks, such as shale. The river will most likely cut across the rock.
Shale rocks are formed in the deep waters of swaps, oceans and lakes where the water is still and the fine clay and silt particles are able to settle to the floor. Shale rocks can easily erode due to weathering.
No. Not that well as sandstone. The shale starts to puddle into the water and flows inside the small puddle of water.
Quartzite
Limestone erodes with water. Limestone can also erode through water getting in to the cracks and then freezing. This causes the crack to expand and will begin to erode the limestone.
the rushing water cause the hill to erode
no
Shale
yes.
Salt water will erode earth material much more quicker.
Shale is a sedimentary rock formed from mud on the bottoms of bodies of water and in floodplains.
Shale