I believe it is talc
Yes and no. Rock can be pretty soft.
Kimmeridge Clay is a soft rock, composed mainly of clay minerals such as illite and kaolinite. It is typically easily eroded and can have low strength compared to harder rocks like sandstone or limestone.
Clay is not considered a soft rock. It is a type of sedimentary material that is formed from the weathering and erosion of rocks. Clay has a fine particle size and exhibits plasticity when wet, making it an important material in ceramics and construction.
Sand is a lot of tiny rocks and clay is very compact soil.
To get soft clay within Runescape you must first mine a clay rock, located in many mines throughout Runescape, once you have some clay you must get a bucket and fill it with water and use it on the clay.
I think that is clay. But I am not sure
Clay is actually a description of sediment of a specific particle size. As such clay is not necessarily a rock. However when compacted and cemented clay forms claystone which is a sedimentary rock.
Yes, that is why they are called clay cliffs. When it dries, clay is firm, and forms a soft rock, however it is easily eroded, so clay cliffs are often unstable.
Just press it in to soft clay. To get soft clay you have to go to the dwarf placeand climb down the ladder and keep on going down don't go left go down and prspect eack rock until you find the clay mine it go get a bucket of water and poor it on the clay and it will turn into soft clay.
The rock described is likely to be shale, which is a sedimentary rock composed of clay minerals. Shale is typically white to gray in color, medium soft in texture, and fine-grained.
Even though they've got some soft songs, Jars of Clay is actually more Christian rock than Contemporary Christian
you take a piece of clay and use it on a bucket of water, voila, soft clay.