I would imagine it would depend on what kind of rock it is.
when you click on a rock you have to but somewhere so when you but in its correct it can be right because it has to to be smallest rock to biggestActually, what you do is:1.put red rock on yellow rock2.put white rock on red rock3. put grey rock on bigger white-grey rock4.put white rock on grey rock5.put red rock on empty stick6.put white rock on red rock6.put yellow rock on grey rock7.put white rock on empty stick8.put red rock on yellow rock9.put white rock on red rock0+
In the very distance past, the skeleton remains of the shells of minute organisms, settled in thick beds on the ocean floors. Due to upheavals and shifting of the earth's crust, the layers were often put under great pressure, and eventually hardened into limestone rock.
Depending on how tightly packed a rock's components and molecules are put together and what the composition of the rock itself is, the amount of time it takes for the rock to be effected by outside forces will vary.
Marble is a metamorphic rock with a parent rock of limestone or dolostone and is formed by natural processes by heat and pressure. The heat may be derived by proximity to a magmatic intrusion or from depth of burial.
The two main ways minerals are put together in rock are crystalline and clastic. The crystalline process gives rocks the characteristic and structure of crystals. Clastic rocks are composed of fragments, or clasts, of pre-existing minerals and rock.
nothing happens
It esplodes
It goes into the cup.
limestone will begin to fizz and slowly breakdown. It shows the affects of eroision due to the chemical makeup of limestone.
Yes, when vinegar comes in contact with limestone, a chemical reaction occurs that releases carbon dioxide gas, resulting in sizzling or fizzing. This reaction is due to the acidic nature of vinegar (acetic acid) reacting with the calcium carbonate in limestone.
When you put limestone into vinegar, it will shift around and sometimes create bubbles.
Yes you can, for example, "Limestone is my favorite rock."
If you take a piece of limestone (very common rock, often used for gravel) and put it in a small dish. Fill the dish with vinegar to just over the top of the rock. Leave it for a week. Come back, and you'll have pure white crystals growing on top of the rock.
poops the vinegar
It melts
Jade is not soluble in vinegar.
the celery will die