Quartzite is a nonfoliated metamorphic rock that formed by the metamorphism of pure quartz sandstone. The intense heat and pressure of metamorphism causes the quartz grains to compact and become tightly intergrown with each other, resulting in very hard and dense quartzite. I found this on Minerals Education Coalition
Quartzite is very and and more resistent than its parent rock because of the internal arrangement of atoms during lithification and causing thus magma and lava to evaporate into quartz in quartzite stronger than sand thus therefore then the crust will break revealing a softer sand and harder quartz or quartzite
Depends what "IT" is - can you be a little more specific please Hard work and determination
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Really hard. Hard enough to break your nose. So for this turds^ answer. The average ufc fighter punches with 375 psi(pounds per square inch) which is more force than if and elephant would stand on your head with one foot.
It's not hard to use; oil flows out better and gives you more work time than an acrylic primer. It does however, require mineral spirits for cleanup and take longer to dry.
The term "parent material" is generic and it refers to any type of substance or material which undergoes some process to produce another material. The term "parent material" can be used in geology, chemistry or radioactivity for three of many examples. In Earth science and geology , it may refer to mineral composition that weathers easily can produce more soil, for example. In nuclear physics, it is the radioactive material that decays to produce daughter nuclei. In chemistry, it is material that undergoes chemical change to yield another chemical.
quartzite is made from quartz. in the case of metamorphic rocks, quartzite is made from regional metamorphism. in the process of regional metamorphism, pressure is applied making the rock hard and dense.
a sandstone would break more easily because a quartzite is harder. a quartzite is made of sandstone melted together by magma
No. Sandstone is usually weaker than quartzite.
They are both metamorphic rocks. One difference is the rocks they are formed from. Gneiss is formed from Feldspar and Quartz. Gneiss can also contain muscovite, biotite and hornblende. Quartzite is formed from sandstone. Also Gneiss is more intensely foliated than Quartzite. This can be seen in the bands formed in Gneiss, while quartzite has no bands. Pure quartzite is white, while Gneiss is grey or pink, with dark streaks.
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Steel was more rust resistent and more durable.
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.
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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.
Quartzite is the metamorphic product of sandstone. During metamorphism, intense heat and/or pressure cause the quartz grains contained in the sandstone grow and recrystallize, interlocking together creating Quartzite.
Granite, quartzite, marble, metaconglomerate, and many more rocks just to name a few. :-D