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Crevasse, sometimes wrongly spelled, "Crevice".
Ice freezing in a crack of a rock is considered weathering.
abration when the water goings into the little tiny crack to get the hole bigger like this heres an example rain water ice hole gets bigger rain water ice hole gets bigger
It hapens erosions
Yes. Ice causes physical weathering by gring rock with abrasion or by freezing and thawing when ice is stuck in rock it expands putting a larger crack in the rock and when it thawes the water goes down the rock and erodes it.
Fissure
Crevasse, sometimes wrongly spelled, "Crevice".
Ice freezing in a crack of a rock is considered weathering.
Ice freezing in a crack of a rock is considered weathering.
As water in the crack turns into ice, the ice expands and may widen the crack, even splitting the rock.
abration when the water goings into the little tiny crack to get the hole bigger like this heres an example rain water ice hole gets bigger rain water ice hole gets bigger
It does what all water does when it freezes: expands. This will crack the rock.
It hapens erosions
When water turns from liquid water to solid ice it expands in volume. If the water is in a crack in the rock the force of this expansion can force the crack to widen and, over time, break the rock.
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Ice Wedging Or Frost Wedging
Water expands as it freezes. So if water gets into a crack in a rock, and then freezes, the expanding ice pushes against the rock and can cause the rock to break.