The factors that cause rocks to wear away are chemical weathering, biological weathering and physical weathering. Physical weathering consists of changes in rain, waves, weather and temperature. Biological weathering involves plants growing in between rocks changing its size and shape. An example of chemical weathering is acid rain decomposing the form of a rock.
Water, Ice, Air, and Rocks. Water washes away all the loose rocks and other materials, Ice freezes in cracks that water seeped into and breaks off rocks (because ice expands when it freezes) and glaciers scrape the land, Air blows away any loose materials and carrys sand which scraches the ground, and Rocks break off other rocks as they fall, and scrape land when being pulled by a glacier.
Chemical and mechanical weathering, and erosion.
Rocks wear away through weathering processes. Chemical weathering is the decomposition or dissolution of a rock. Physical weathering is cracking, scratching, crushing, abrasion, etc.
The surface of the Earth wears down through physical and chemical weathering, from erosion, from gravity, and from the effects of plate tectonics.
erosion...sometimes it can be from water rushing past over time, other times it can be from compression or.
Water & Air
Wearing away of rocks is called weathering.
Erosion.
Erosion
Waves are energy carried by the water, and this energy pounds away at rocks on the shore, eventually wearing them down. Sediment is carried back into the water by the receding waves. As the waves come to shore again, the sediment acts like sandpaper, slowly wearing away at the shoreline.
Weathering is the cause of mountains wearing away.
Wearing away of rocks is called weathering.
No, though they are often confused. Here are the definitions:Weathering: the wearing away of rocks in situErosion: the wearing away and taking away of rocks
Erosion
Erosion.
When two rocks rub up against each other, pieces of the rock wear away. This is called abrasion.
No, though they are often confused. Here are the definitions:Weathering: the wearing away of rocks in situErosion: the wearing away and taking away of rocks
exfoilation
physical
physical
physical
Waves are energy carried by the water, and this energy pounds away at rocks on the shore, eventually wearing them down. Sediment is carried back into the water by the receding waves. As the waves come to shore again, the sediment acts like sandpaper, slowly wearing away at the shoreline.
its called weathering. the wearing away of rocks or dirt by wind water natural disasters and even humans...