subduction? I'm not sure.
The respective terrain is made up of mountain tops and slopes, so...
Yes
The phenomenon of gas diffusion.
Foliation is more likely to occur during mountain building rather than through the contact of rock with magma because of the stress that is developed during mountain building. This refers to the action on a plane as the force applied per unit area of the plane.
the driving force for erosion is , when bad things come out of driving that involves erosion.
Competition would be the driving force of exclusion
The force of gravity pulls a snowboarder down a mountain.
Mountains are formed by plae tectonics. It happens when 2 plates collide and 1 plate is pushed up. The resulting upwards force makes a mountain range. The Rockies, Andes, and the Himalayas are all examples of this.
In short: you don't. Mountains are formed by geological processes. The Himilayas are fold mountains where two continental crusts have collided. The force crumples the rock into mountains. The Andes are formed at a destructive plate boundary where the force of the plate moving under it forces the ground up.
pine mountain was formed by a constructive force. earth's plates colliding created pine mountain.
compresive force
blee