its the techtonic plates.
one plate slides over the other which = trust from action
A crater
No, Mt Everest is a 'fold/thrust' mountain. The rocks at the top of Mt. Everest contain sea shells from the ocean floor.
Mt. Greylock is the tallest point in Massachusetts. It is composed of metamorphosed sedimentary rock, such as marble, and is the product of tectonic thrust faulting. It is not volcanic.
Mt. McKinley, also known as Denali, is not a volcano. It is a tall mountain located in Alaska, USA, and is the highest peak in North America. Denali is the result of tectonic uplift and not volcanic activity.
Thrust Capacity is how much thrust it can take :D
Jaw-Thrust Technique
Thrusted is the past tense and past participle of thrust.
The angle at which you thrust.
No. Darwin originally listed it as active on his voyage on the Beagle, but the mountain is not volcanic and its height results from imbricate thrust faulting, or in simpler terms, gradual tectonic plate activity.
The past tense of "thrust" is "thrust." "Thrust" is an irregular verb, meaning it does not follow the typical rule of adding "-ed" to form the past tense. Instead, the past tense remains the same as the base form. So, you would say, "He thrust the sword into the stone."
Net thrust in a ramjet engine is the actual useful thrust generated for propulsion, while gross thrust is the total thrust including the contributions from ram pressure. The net thrust is the difference between the gross thrust and the drag of the engine itself. The net thrust determines the actual propulsion force available for moving the aircraft forward.
there is no thrust lake.