1. Weathering.
2. Metamorphism.
3. Deformation.
4. Erosion.
Four processes are compaction and cementation, metamorphism, and cooling.
temperature
The type of rock that forms deepest inside the Earth is called igneous rock. This rock is formed when molten material from the Earth's mantle solidifies deep underground. It can later be exposed at the surface through processes like volcanic eruptions.
Earth's surface and inside the planet slowly change rocks from one kind to another.
No, shale rock is not a melted material inside the earth. It is a type of sedimentary rock formed from compacted mud and clay particles. Melted materials inside the earth form igneous rocks through volcanic or intrusive processes.
True. The rock cycle is produced by a combination of processes, including geological forces inside the Earth (such as heat and pressure) as well as surface processes like weathering, erosion, and deposition. These processes work together to transform rocks from one type to another over time.
If a rock is buried deep inside the Earth, the process of weathering, which involves the breakdown of rocks into smaller particles due to exposure to environmental factors like water, wind, and temperature changes, would not be able to change the rock. This is because the rock is shielded from these external factors by the layers of earth above it. However, other geological processes such as metamorphism, which involves the alteration of rock through heat and pressure, can still change the rock even if it is buried deep underground.
It would have to be melted into the earths magma and cool down as either intrusive (inside the earth) or extrusive (on the Earth's crust) igneous rock.
It would have to be melted into the earths magma and cool down as either intrusive (inside the earth) or extrusive (on the Earth's crust) igneous rock.
forces inside earth
Permafrost, submission, mantle and tectonic plate continental shelf drift
Igneous rock forms when melted rock (magma) from inside the Earth cools.