Glaciers do not go through erosion, they erode.
Some streams or rivers can go really fast through plateaus and stuff, on the way they can wash the sediments and rocks that were there before. This causing erosion.
Plateau is formed from erosion. Go to google and look up a picture of the plateau in Australia.
An example of erosion is if let's say that there was a river on top of a mountain. As time passes by, the water will rub against the rocks and it will rub against it so much that it will go through the rocks and then it will end up splitting through the mountain. An example of deposition is if let's say there is a river. As rocks and dirt fall into the water the river will carry the rocks and dirt down into an ocean or sea, and that will drop off the dirt somewhere else and so on.
Passing into a cloud is no different from passing through mist on the ground. The only important exception is if you're flying on Visual Flight Rules, and then you'd better not do so.
You might want to go on google and search the definition of erosion just to make sure, but from me 95% of my brain sayes yes because erosion is the movement of particles. And when they shift, they are moving. Although if you are talking about the plates landing up shifted, that is deposition.
A GLACIER goes through erosion because of the heat wind waves/this part is an option and by cold
yes
Erosion.
you dodge them
the 4 processes rocks go through are erosion, weathering, uplift, and deposition
They can turn into sediments or dissolve.
um..idk go outside and look up and that big yellow thing just so happens to be the sun
the can form volcanic activity ... to be continuded
They don't
ocean
They can. because, glaciers pick up sediment as they go along slowly.
Some streams or rivers can go really fast through plateaus and stuff, on the way they can wash the sediments and rocks that were there before. This causing erosion.