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soil
The Rock Layer has to harden first of all before it can be deposited.
I am not sure.....is it sedimentary rock the answer??
Yes and No An igneous rock can not just "become" a sedimentary rock, it first has to be weathered and eroded at the surface of the Earth. The debris produced is then washed away as sediment and deposited elsewhere. This deposited sediment then gradually hardens into a new rock which is a sedimentary rock. Thus until igneous rocks are exposed in outcrop, they remain as igneous rocks.
The time it takes for a thick layer of sedimentary rock to form can vary significantly depending on various factors, such as the depositional environment, the rate of sedimentation, and the type of sediment being deposited. In general, it can take anywhere from a few hundred to millions of years for a thick layer of sedimentary rock to form.
soil
Sandstone is a sedimentary rock formed from layer upon layer of deposited sand which undergoes lithification.
The Rock Layer has to harden first of all before it can be deposited.
sedimentary layer ㅡㅡ
A sedimentary rock becomes another sedimentary rock through erosion. The rock is eroded into bits, carried away, deposited and cemented and then lithified into a new sedimentary rock
a layer of rock
I am not sure.....is it sedimentary rock the answer??
As sedimentary rock is deposited at over time, you can find fossils in it.
By being first weathered into loose material (clast), then transported, then deposited, and then consolidated.
Metamorphic
Sedimentary rock.
Sedimentary