a sandstone would break more easily because a quartzite is harder. a quartzite is made of sandstone melted together by magma
Silica sand would first lithify into sandstone. It could then undergo metamorphism through heat and pressure and form the metamorphic rock quartzite.
It would be highly unlikely. When a rock undergoes metamorphasis the minerals in the sample often move small distances and aggregate with others of its kind. This process would obliterate the traces of fossils in most instances.
Sandstone. Shale and limestone do work, but they are not as good as sandstone. Wet mud also works, but it is not as permeable as sandstone.
For chemical weathering to turn a sandstone into a pile of sand, the sandstone would have to have been cemented by a mineral that was easily attacked by weakly acidic rainfall, most likely calcite. The acidic rainfall would dissolve the cementing material through chemical reaction, leaving the chemically resistant sand grains behind.
Vinegar, with a pH of 2.8, is very acidic and as a result will etch any sealed finish on your granite. Typical etchings will appear as hazy areas, dull spots or rings.
Sandstone
In quartzite the grains are essentially welded together under pressure, which holds them together much more strongly than the fairly weak cementation in sandstone.
It would be classified as the metamorphic rock quartzite.
sandstone or quartzite is very hard stone i think there is no possibility that it can form a soil....because if undergo weather cycle it only form igneous rocks which is smaller and less harder than the original properties
The metamorphic rock quartzite would form due to the heat and pressure.
The magnificent sandstone cliffs rose high above the river, creating a stunning natural landscape.
Silica sand would first lithify into sandstone. It could then undergo metamorphism through heat and pressure and form the metamorphic rock quartzite.
it looks like a stone made out of sand and it brakes easily.
schist and gneiss arefoliated and in gneiss you can see the bands.
It would be highly unlikely. When a rock undergoes metamorphasis the minerals in the sample often move small distances and aggregate with others of its kind. This process would obliterate the traces of fossils in most instances.
Schist and gneiss are metamorphic rocks that display foliation, the parallel layering of the minerals caused by immense pressures. Quartzite and marble do not display foliation as they are metamorphosed more by heat than by pressure.
Sandstone. Shale and limestone do work, but they are not as good as sandstone. Wet mud also works, but it is not as permeable as sandstone.