You can tell rocks apart by its hardness, cleavage, and streak
Plants can break rocks apart using their roots. As roots grow, they can exert pressure on rocks, causing them to crack or break over time. The process of roots breaking apart rocks is known as biological weathering.
A normal fault may form when rocks are pulled apart. In a normal fault, the hanging wall drops down relative to the footwall due to tensional forces pulling the rocks apart.
Tensional stress causes rocks to pull apart. This type of stress occurs when rocks are being pulled in opposite directions, leading to the stretching and extension of the rock mass. Over time, this can lead to the formation of faults and fractures in the rocks.
Rocks being pulled apart are under tension. This is found at divergent plate boundaries. It is a tension fault.
Rocks and mountains break apart due to various factors such as weathering, erosion, and tectonic activity. Weathering breaks down rocks through physical processes like freezing and thawing, while erosion removes the broken rock material. Tectonic activity like earthquakes and volcanic eruptions can cause rocks to break apart as well.
General physical appearance.
erosion can break rocks apart, weathering can also break rocks apart
One way to tell rocks apart is by how the rock feels, and this physical property is called texture. It is normally determined by the size and form of its constituent, as well as its general appearance.
Yes, "breaking apart" is the progressive form of the particle verb "break apart". E.g., "He is breaking apart the rocks" or "The rocks are breaking apart".
Minerals contain one or many types of minerals (copper, gold, zinc) Rocks contain different types of minerals (Granite- Feldspar, Quartz, Mica, Hornblende)
The answer depends on what you want tell it apart from!
Igneous rocks are rocks that are type of rock that forms from molten rock.
Rocks moving apart can cause normal faults to form, as opposed to reverse and strike-slip faults.
Plants can break rocks apart using their roots. As roots grow, they can exert pressure on rocks, causing them to crack or break over time. The process of roots breaking apart rocks is known as biological weathering.
a chisel and a hammer
Weathering.
By erosion