heat, pressure, and sediment.
Metamorphic rocks
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Igneous rocks are of various ages, from billions of years to minutes in age.
The Earth is still tectonically active and because Earth has weather. The tectonic activity refreshes the crust as some plates are forced under others, removing old rock from the surface, and things like the sea floor spreading and volcanic activity producing all new crust. Additionally, the weather on the Earth constantly works to erode existing crust and wash it into the oceans.The moon is neither terctonically active nor is there weather. The moon is, in planetary science terms, dead. There is no process to remove old surface rocks and replace with new ones.
yes young rocks are found at mid ocean ridges not old rocks.
Someone who is constructive makes new things or old things better. No just physical, but ideas also.
Old rocks! New or young rocks are at the top!
Old rocks! New or young rocks are at the top!
new things are better than old depending on what your talking about.
Yes, a rock ages at a rate of 1 year per year. ANOTHER ANSWER: Rocks don't GROW. Rocks are not 'living beings'. Rocks are not born from seeds or from 'birth'. Only 'living things' age. Rocks GET old; just like your car GETS old. It deteriorates. Rocks WEAR-AWAY when exposed to the elements.
Old Things New was created on 2009-10-27.
Rocks can be found almost anywhere, sandstone can be found in beaches, granite is mostly found in New York city. I hear there might be some igneous rocks in central park.
old and new
the rocks are 67576million years old and some of the rocks are 13542million years old.
The saying "Out with the old, in with the new" has been around for centuries, with variations appearing in different cultures and languages. It generally conveys the idea of replacing old things with new things and is often used to encourage change or new beginnings.
There are several ways by which old rocks can become "new" rocks, all of which are described by the rock cycle. A rock, no matter what class it falls under, can become igneous, metamorphic, or sedimentary. When melted and then re-cooled, a rock become igneous. When exposed to very high temperature and pressure, the rock becomes metamorphic. When weather or eroded by wind, water, etc., and then lithified (cemented together), the rock becomes sedimentary. Again, any rock can go from one class to the other, or in some cases become a new rock of the same class.
Krackle