mostly aluminum, because it doesn't erode and hard enough to blend things
no, in rain water there are basic acids (collected in the atmosphere naturally and pollution) that erode diffrent material faster than if wind was hiting the same object, it depends on the materials environment
Erode means to gradually wear away
The water can erode rocks and other things until they become beaches or some other type of landforms
what types of landscapes erode faster
things that erode weathered rock
No, that would make absolutely no sense. Only wind and water are able to erode things such as rocks and minerals.
Wind, water, animals :)
A river's power to erode depends on a river's slope, the volume of flow, and the shape of the river.
Weathering, wind, rain, extreme temperatures.
ice, water, wind, gravity
There are three things a river's power to erode depends on that includes the slope of the river. The other two things are the volume of flow and the shape of its stream bed.
No, erosion is when things degrade over time. Even though rain does erode things, it is not erosion.
Yes! When snow melts the resulting water can erode things.
Erode is the Capital of the Erode District.
A synonym for erode is build or construct.
A river can erode and construct things, such as canals and canyons. They are strong forces.