A typical karst landscape feature - a roughly conical depression which may or may not (more usually not) contain a cave entrance.
Faults occur near plate boundaries because the earth is weaker there... The magma under the Earth's crust makes the plates move very slowly and sometimes two plates can crash into each other causing the ground to shake.
Near.
Usually near.
The abyss has no "bottom". It's called the "bottomless pit". The Abyss does have a bottom otherwise the world would turn inside out Not necessarily - otherwise the same would apply to a black hole. A black hole is a vacuum within a depleted star which has no "end" either - or in other words "bottomless".
Volcano
a sinkhole
"Stood" is not a preposition. It is a verb indicating an action or state of standing.
It would fall downwards.
You would get sucked into it quickly
You would not; you wouldn't survive the tidal forces as you came near the black hole. Your atoms would fall into the event horizon, but your molecules would be destroyed before then.
That would depend on the mass of the black hole, and how close it came. A black hole the size of a star, a few light-years distance, would not be any more dangerous than a star at the same distance.
You can find ozone hole over south pole. It is located near Antarctica.
Your "weight" is the magnitude of the gravitational force between you and another mass. -- In deep space, far from any other mass, the gravitational force between you and any other mass would be very small, but never zero. -- Near a back hole, the gravitational force between you and the black hole would be (gravitational constant) x (your mass) x (black hole's mass)/(your distance from the black hole)2
There are two: "in" and "of".
A black hole near Neptune -- or near any other object in space -- would suck up that planet (or that object). Fortunately, there nearest black hole to our Solar System is several thousand light years away.
No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.
It would all depend on how close the neutron star was. If it was outside the event horizon, then if would be observed to be orbiting "nothing". If it strayed too close to the black hole, then it would be slowly ripped apart, until a slightly larger black hole was all that is left.