Deformation
after shock
because when it acts on the surface it stretches the rock to make craters or " dents" on the crust.
Any change in the volume or shape of Earth's crust is called crustal deformation. This can occur due to tectonic forces, such as compression, extension, or shearing, which lead to features like folding, faulting, and uplift.
The matter that can change shape and volume is gas.
A solid does. Liquids change in shape and gases change in both shape and volume.
A solid has a definite shape and volume.
A solid has a fixed volume and does not change shape.
A gas can change shape but it doesn't change volume, a liquid also changes shape but doesn't change volume.
The forces of plate movement can change a flat plain into landforms produced by folding, stretching, and uplifing Earth's crust.
Yes, they can take the shape and volume of their container.
Compression or stretching can change the shape of an object without changing its volume. When an object is compressed or stretched in one direction, its shape is altered but the volume remains constant.
Shearing, tension, and compression work over millions of years to change the shape and volume of rock. Those are types of stress.