the recrystallization of unmelted material under high pressure results in Metamorphic Rock
Where is metamorphic rock frequently found
Metamorphic rock
See http://www.answers.com/topic/cheddar-cheese-1 Melted/unmelted isn't going to make much difference.
=== === The presence of water in hydrous minerals which are being subducted can speed melting of some minerals. Others crystals that would be solid at a deeper depth can melt in a high-temperature, subducting environment. The resulting partial melt can carry unmelted material upward, where lower pressure allows more melt to occur. This process can occur all the way up to volcanic eruption, or the rising magma can partially or entirely stop and cool in place.
xenoliths
No, because stone like solid are unmelted.
Exactly the same as its unmelted counterpart.
When ice cream melts, the particles actually move faster, not slower, then when it is unmelted.
Melting is a phase change. Typically what happens is that the snow absorbs heat until it has warmed to the melting point. As it continues to absorb heat, it undergoes an isothermal (the temperature doesn't change) phase change (melts). Once it has melted, it may continue to warm up above the melting point temperature. In practice different parts of the snow will be at different temperatures. The snow at the surface will be absorbing the heat and melting. As it melts, the water from the melted snow runs down into the unmelted snow where it supplies heat to that snow to start warming it up.
Yes. Just like a pound of fresh hamburger meat is still a pound of hamburger meat after it's frozen.
Anything that dissolves in water. Usually salt is used. <><><> Salt makes ice melt faster- question was keep from melting. Materials that insulate ice from air or water around it. Leaves, pine needles, and sawdust will allow ice to stay cold and unmelted.
Magma is more buoyant than lithospheric rock, and as such it will push toward the surface. On the continents, magma in intrusions can follow weaknesses in the crustal rock to reach the surface, or in some cases, simply melt its way through from the heat delivered by the intrusion. At divergent plate boundaries, where the lithospheric plates are pulling apart, hot rock from the mantle rises and melts from decompression melting, filling the space left from the parting plates. At so-called hotspots, such as the Hawaiian volcanic mountain chain, magma plumes are thought to rise up from the mantle-core boundary and burn through the moving lithospheric plates, creating first submarine volcanoes, then islands.
Flannel acts as an insulator, keeping things at the same temperature. It slows down heat transfer with the surroundings. If what you wrap it in is colder than the surroundings, then it will take longer to warm up. If what you wrap in it is warmer than the surroundings, it will take longer to cool down. Ice can stay cold and people can stay warm. The same concept is true for the common thermos bottle - you can keep hot chocolate hot in it or cold juice cold. Note that in the case of people, we are constantly producing body heat from our metabolism so all the flanel has to do in order to keep us warm is to slow the heat transfer to a rate that is less than or equal to the rate at which our bodies are producing heat.
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 4 words with the pattern --MEL--D. That is, eight letter words with 3rd letter M and 4th letter E and 5th letter L and 8th letter D. In alphabetical order, they are: cameloid homeland remelted unmelted