In one way (ice wedging), water gets into cracks in the rock, then freezes. This force can eventually split the rock crystals.
In another (moving ice), a glacier or other large mass of ice moves across the rocks surface. This can scour away loose rock by friction. (It does not require that there be imbedded rocks, but this can also occur, where rocks are pushed together until one breaks.)
weather is precipitation rain, hail, snow, ice,e.g. weathering is the wearing away of rock
to melt the ice
by wind,rain,ice,chemical actions,plants,etc.
You have to destroy all the weather changes in the area.
In one way (ice wedging), water gets into cracks in the rock, then freezes. This force can eventually split the rock crystals. In another (moving ice), a glacier or other large mass of ice moves across the rocks surface. This can scour away loose rock by friction. (It does not require that there be imbedded rocks, but this can also occur, where rocks are pushed together until one breaks.)
wind because it slowly erodes it.
The roots of certain plants can break or crack into a rock, making the rock more susceptible to frost wedging (ice wedging).
Ice-wedging occurs when water seeps into cracks in a rock, freezes, expands, and widens the crack. As the water repeatedly freezes and thaws, the crack will continue to expand due to the pressure exerted by the ice. Over time, this process can cause the rock to break apart into smaller pieces.
Weather can be a good example of ice erosion. When the weather gets bad and there is hail, the hail then hits the ground or hits other things that are solid, such as rock walls, or rocky features. When this happens, the hail can sometimes hit as such hard forces to cause a crack, split, break, or hole in these features, thus causing ice erosion.
When water seeps into a crack in a rock during warm weather and then freezed in cold weather , it expands. And when it expands, it pushes against the sides of the crack forcing it to open wider.
When water seeps into a crack in a rock during warm weather and then freezed in cold weather , it expands. And when it expands, it pushes against the sides of the crack forcing it to open wider.
No - Ice Rock is not in Pokémon Emerald.