i dont know
No, stalagmites are formed from calcium carbonate deposits left behind by dripping water in caves. The water does not contain salt but rather minerals that have been dissolved from the surrounding rock. Over time, these minerals build up and solidify into the stalagmite formations.
Calcium carbonate deposits that form on a cave's floor are known as stalagmites. Stalagmites grow upwards from the floor of the cave due to mineral-rich water dripping and evaporating, leaving behind layers of calcium carbonate. Over time, these deposits can form intricate and fascinating structures within caves.
Stalagmites are typically formed from calcium carbonate deposits left behind by dripping water in caves. This mineral-rich water slowly accumulates and solidifies over time, creating the cone-shaped stalagmites that grow from the floor of the cave.
No, stalagmites are formed from mineral deposits left behind by dripping water in caves. The water may contain dissolved minerals, but the presence of salt specifically is not a necessary component for stalagmite formation.
Well . . . there are no calcium deposits in water, there is only calcium. The deposits happen on things that the water falls on, then dries. What is left is a deposit. To remove the calcium (and magnesium) from water, you run the water through a tank full of little beads of "Filtersord". Most water purifiers use this along with charcoal, which removes bits of dust, and so forth.
They are deposits of calcium carbonate formed on the floor of a cave by the dripping of calcareous water. Can take thousands of years to 'grow'
The calcium deposit formed from water dripping through the roof of a cavern is called a stalactite. Stalactites hang from the roof of the cave and are formed as mineral-rich water drips down and leaves behind calcium deposits that slowly build up over time.
Calcium Carbonate. Both are usually found in lime stone caves. The stalagmite is seen projecting upward from the floor. The stalagmite from the caves roof. The stalagmite will often feed the stalagmite from the moisture dripping from its pointed end. However many are found alone fed by the dripping moisture from the caves roof.
They are carbonate deposits formed by dripping water in air-filled cavities.
Stalagmites, which are found in caves, are cone-shaped formations of calcium deposits made by calcium concentrated water dripping through the cave ceiling and onto the floor of the cave. Once the water evaporates, solid calcium is left behind thus forming a stalagmite. These deposits form like an icicle hanging from the cave roof.However not to be confused with a stalactite (which is a cone-shaped calcium deposit hanging from the ceiling of a cave), stalagmites are cone-shaped icicle formations of calcium deposits that build upward from the cave floor.
Stalactites are formations that hang from the ceilings of caves, formed by mineral deposits left behind by water dripping.
Stalactites are mineral formations that hang from the ceilings of caves, formed by the deposition of minerals from dripping water. They are typically made of calcium carbonate and grow slowly over thousands of years as water seeps through limestone and leaves behind mineral deposits that harden into a rock-like structure.
Do you mean "How are stalactites formed?" ? They are deposits of calcite precipitated from solution in water dripping from joints in cave roofs.
Stalactites grow down from the ceiling of caves or other structures. They are formed by the dripping of mineral-rich water that leaves behind deposits of minerals, typically calcium carbonate, over time.
Not very pure. The water is dripping off a coil that has dirt and pipes that have calcium deposits and probably some mold.
No, stalagmites are formed from calcium carbonate deposits left behind by dripping water in caves. The water does not contain salt but rather minerals that have been dissolved from the surrounding rock. Over time, these minerals build up and solidify into the stalagmite formations.
Stalagmites are mineral deposits that grow upward from the floor of a cave, formed by dripping water containing dissolved minerals. Stalactites are formations that hang from the ceiling of a cave, formed by mineral deposits left behind as water drips from the ceiling.