It's the adjective of geology.
Deimos is not geologically active.
No, since it has no surface, it has no geology.
The moon, Mercury, and Mars are all so small that over time they have lost much of their internal heat and have become geologically dead. Unlike the Earth which is geologically alive, mercury has no tectonic or core activity. There are no tectonic plates There are no volcanos There is no wind erosion There is no frost erosion There are no rivers and therefore no water erosion There is no change due to living organisms eg sedimentation
Ultramafic rocks are of relatively small extent in the North Cascades, but are geologically significant because they are derived from the Earth's mantle.
No. Pennsylvania is not in a geologically active area.
It means having valuable minerals.
Deimos is not geologically active.
Assuming you mean geologically, it's moving west.
The answer from Castle Learning is Punctuated Equilibrium.
Is there any geologically active volcano"s in japan? I know there is
No, since it has no surface, it has no geology.
An adverb form of the noun "geology" would be "geologically," as in, 'The San Andreas Fault is a geologically active region.'
The moon, Mercury, and Mars are all so small that over time they have lost much of their internal heat and have become geologically dead. Unlike the Earth which is geologically alive, mercury has no tectonic or core activity. There are no tectonic plates There are no volcanos There is no wind erosion There is no frost erosion There are no rivers and therefore no water erosion There is no change due to living organisms eg sedimentation
No, it is not.
Io
Earth is the only geologically active planet among the terrestrial planets. There are some geologically active moons in orbit around the gas giants. Enceladus is quite an interesting moon of Saturn.
Ultramafic rocks are of relatively small extent in the North Cascades, but are geologically significant because they are derived from the Earth's mantle.