By being in the same area or Causing weathering at the same time or place
Rates start at 69% and higher .
Mechanical weathering can be caused by wind, precipitation (rain, hail, etc), animals walking over it, basically anything that is a physical abrasion of the rock, not a chemical reaction.
Both chemical and mechanical weathering breakdown a rock into particles, just in diffrent ways. Mechanical weathering is the physical weathering in which a rock is broken down into particles. Chemical weathering is the weathering in which rocks are disolved, decomposed , or loosend to change the minerals in the rock.
It will start to experience chemical and mechanical weathering, along with erosion.
There are several types of rock weathering: chemical (oxidation, chemical reaction to acidic fluids), mechanical (frost wedging, water hydraulics), and biological (plant root growth, burrowing by animals, plant secretions). Technically, any process that results in a diminution or reduction in rock size is classified as a weathering process. Therefore, the answer to the question would be 'yes'.
The rates of mechanical weathering does not affect anything since the chemical properties remain unchanged. Only chemical weathering affects the chemical properties of an object.
The rates of mechanical weathering does not affect anything since the chemical properties remain unchanged. Only chemical weathering affects the chemical properties of an object.
Rates start at 69% and higher .
Mechanical weathering can be caused by wind, precipitation (rain, hail, etc), animals walking over it, basically anything that is a physical abrasion of the rock, not a chemical reaction.
Both chemical and mechanical weathering breakdown a rock into particles, just in diffrent ways. Mechanical weathering is the physical weathering in which a rock is broken down into particles. Chemical weathering is the weathering in which rocks are disolved, decomposed , or loosend to change the minerals in the rock.
It will start to experience chemical and mechanical weathering, along with erosion.
There are several types of rock weathering: chemical (oxidation, chemical reaction to acidic fluids), mechanical (frost wedging, water hydraulics), and biological (plant root growth, burrowing by animals, plant secretions). Technically, any process that results in a diminution or reduction in rock size is classified as a weathering process. Therefore, the answer to the question would be 'yes'.
There are a few different weathering conditions that might affect copper. Rain and snow are some conditions that would affect copper.
rocks
it might kill it haha
give example of a real life situation where a substance's resisrance to weathering might make a difference
Both are mechanical, physical changes, involving the removal of surface material by the action of wind or water. But both can also involve chemical changes which would tend to change the rate of erosion or weathering - for example, acidic rain might cause limestone to weather faster than neutral rain water would.