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No land plants in the deepest rock layers. Water plants are easily covered with sediment while land plants rot long before sediment covers them usually.
plants can cause the weatering of the rock plants may grow on the rock the minerals of rocks are used by the plants
Plants roots grow in cracks in rocks. This causes a rock to break apart. Animals dig in the ground and while digging, it breaks down rock gradually.
Plant root growth penetrates small cracks and crevices in rock and spreads them further apart, fracturing them and making them more vulnerable to chemical weathering. Other plants can attack the surface of rock directly, extracting nutrients.
well, one is that the outer is made of gas and are giagantic while the inner are small and made of mainly rock
to make plants grow good...and to have a nutrients by the rock
Berry's and small plants
Royton E. Heath has written: 'Collectors' alpines' -- subject(s): Alpine flora, Rock plants 'Rock plants for small gardens' -- subject(s): Rock gardens, Rock plants
rocks help the plant to be strong
No land plants in the deepest rock layers. Water plants are easily covered with sediment while land plants rot long before sediment covers them usually.
No land plants in the deepest rock layers. Water plants are easily covered with sediment while land plants rot long before sediment covers them usually.
No land plants in the deepest rock layers. Water plants are easily covered with sediment while land plants rot long before sediment covers them usually.
No land plants in the deepest rock layers. Water plants are easily covered with sediment while land plants rot long before sediment covers them usually.
methinks you need work on your vocabulary
Either in a small rock or underneath a bed of sea plants or another means of protection.
Sedimentary
the effect is that if the rock is to big the it wont go far so you will need a small rock. but if you want a big rock then you will need a big sling shot and it has to be strong.