it is by your face dissolving into tiny little pieces
Rocks
all the rocks decompose and break down into soil ar dirt or mud
Rocks, water and soil.
water, soil, sun, rocks, and air are non-living parts of an ecosystem
Minerals become part of the soil through processes like weathering of rocks, decomposition of organic matter, and the activities of organisms like plants and microorganisms. As rocks break down, minerals are released and added to the soil. Plants absorb these minerals from the soil, and when they die and decompose, they return nutrients back to the soil.
It is either naturally acidic or the rocks and minerals around it make it become acidic. This can be harmful to plants.
Weathering is the process that breaks rocks into small pieces to form soil. This can occur through physical weathering (such as from wind, water, or ice) or chemical weathering (such as from acids or oxidation). Over time, these processes break down rocks into smaller particles that eventually become soil.
Plant roots anchor soil and split rocks to make new soil.
Rocks turn into soil through a process called weathering. Weathering can be physical, such as through the freezing and thawing of water in cracks, or chemical, such as through the reaction of rocks with acids in water. Over time, this process breaks down rocks into smaller particles that eventually become soil.
Sunlight, rocks, air Trees, water, animals Soil, grass, insects
Soil, sand, gravel, rocks, water, sunlight - all abiotic factors in the desert.
The minerals get into the soil by erosion of the rocks.