melting andsolidification
They must undergo deposition then have heat and pressure applied. Sedimentary rocks are formed by the actions of chemical or mechanical processes.
Igneous rock is reduced to particles by erosion processes. Those particles can be carried by streams or wind to a point of deposition where they may eventually lithify to become sedimentary rock. Igneous rock such as granite can be transformed to metamorphic rock by exposure to additional heat and pressure deep within the earth.
No. It can change directly into metamorphic rock due to heat and pressure. For example, granite turning into gneiss.
ErosionDepositionBurial and Cementing
To become a sedimentary rock, an igneous rock must first be weathered, and then eroded, and then deposited as a sediment, and then consolidated (e.g. by cementation or pressure welding of grains.) To become a metamorphic rock it must be transformed by heat and pressure, which it can do directly (e.g. granite turning into gneiss) or after first turning into a sedimentary rock.
Sedimentary rocks, as a rule, must first undergo a change into a metamorphic rock (a process which can take hundred of thousands to millions of years), before they may become molten from subduction processes or contact with a body of magma, whereby the magma would cool and form an igneous rock.
Erosion Deposition Burial and Cementing
They must undergo deposition then have heat and pressure applied. Sedimentary rocks are formed by the actions of chemical or mechanical processes.
It melts then it becomes solid
Yes, depending on where it is located
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If sedimentary rock is melted, then solidifies from melt, it is now an igneous rock. This can occur from contact with an intruding body of magma, or from heat and pressure from deep burial or collisions between plates and orogenic processes, where the sedimentary rock is first metamorphosed before melting.
ErosionDepositionBurial and Cementing
Igneous rock is reduced to particles by erosion processes. Those particles can be carried by streams or wind to a point of deposition where they may eventually lithify to become sedimentary rock. Igneous rock such as granite can be transformed to metamorphic rock by exposure to additional heat and pressure deep within the earth.
ErosionDepositionBurial and Cementing
ErosionDepositionBurial and Cementing
ErosionDepositionBurial and Cementing