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When an Igneous rock is broken down by physical processes it can become sediment, carried along rivers and waterways to reach the sea and the oceans. When upon the seabed, it is slowly covered by other sediment, and the combined force of the water above and sediment above working with sea mud and other sea deposits forms sedimentary rock.
Glaciers accumulate sediment through various processes. As glaciers move, they pluck and erode rocks from the underlying bedrock, entraining them into the ice. Glaciers also grind and crush the rocks they come into contact with, generating glacial flour or fine-grained sediment. Additionally, glaciers can transport sediment that has been deposited on their surface by wind or landslides, adding to their load of sediment.
Over time, any remains of living things in sediment may slowly harden and change into fossils trapped in the rock.
No. A glaciers is a slowly flowing mass of ice. A slump is a form of mass wasting in which a mass of rock or sediment breaks loose from a slope and moves relatively slowly downhill as a coherent mass.
To a stationary observer they go across the sky slowly and steadily in nice curves, which are technically small circles on the celestial sphere.
Whenever the river slows down it starts to drop sediment. This usually happens when it meets the sea, unless it meanders slowly across a flood plain in its way.
When an Igneous rock is broken down by physical processes it can become sediment, carried along rivers and waterways to reach the sea and the oceans. When upon the seabed, it is slowly covered by other sediment, and the combined force of the water above and sediment above working with sea mud and other sea deposits forms sedimentary rock.
It can affect the shape of sediment because it is scraping very slowly against it causing it to change,
Both carbon and nitrogen are found in the air as gases and are readily absorbed by the body. Unlike them, phosphorus is not in the air as a gas but rather moves slowly from deposits on land and sediments, to living organisms, and then back into the soil and water sediment.
Glaciers accumulate sediment through various processes. As glaciers move, they pluck and erode rocks from the underlying bedrock, entraining them into the ice. Glaciers also grind and crush the rocks they come into contact with, generating glacial flour or fine-grained sediment. Additionally, glaciers can transport sediment that has been deposited on their surface by wind or landslides, adding to their load of sediment.
They can. because, glaciers pick up sediment as they go along slowly.
The rank forms for the sentence "An old man walked slowly across the road" could include: Active voice: An old man slowly walked across the road. Passive voice: Slowly, across the road, an old man was walked by the man.
The snail moved slowly across the garden path.
Over time, any remains of living things in sediment may slowly harden and change into fossils trapped in the rock.
a worm
Slowly, a thick layer of sediment built up the entire valley floor
The idea that continents move slowly across the earth's surface is called the continental drift.