Stalagmites and stalactites typically form in caves through the deposition of minerals from dripping water, but they do not grow underwater in the same way. When submerged, the conditions for their formation, such as evaporation and air exposure, are not present. However, similar formations can occur underwater, known as underwater stalagmites and stalactites, but they develop through different processes, often involving sediment accumulation or mineral precipitation from water currents.
No, rocks cannot grow like stalactites and stalagmites. Stalactites and stalagmites are formed from minerals that are deposited from water dripping in caves over thousands of years, while rocks are solid masses that do not exhibit the same type of growth.
The stalactites hang from the ceiling, and the stalagmites are on the ground.
Stalactites and stalagmites are formed by dripping water that freezes in caves. Stalactites hang from the ceiling, while stalagmites grow up from the ground. Over time, these formations can grow quite large and intricate.
Stalactites hang tightly to the ceiling of a cave, while stalagmites might grow to reach the cave floor. The names reflect their formation as water drips from the ceiling to form stalactites, and drips onto the cave floor to form stalagmites.
Stalactites and stalagmites are corresponding rock formations , stalactites being the ones on the roof of the cave and stalagmites the ones on the cave floor. Why are they formed? They are formed because water leaking into the caves craves out the rocks slowly into stalagmites and stalactites.
Stalactites are mineral formations that hang from the ceiling of caves, formed by the dripping of mineral-rich water. Stalagmites are similar mineral formations that grow upwards from the cave floor as the water drips down, eventually meeting the stalactites to form columns. Together, stalactites and stalagmites can create beautiful and intricate cave formations.
Stalactites are formations that hang from the ceiling of caves, formed by the dripping of mineral-rich water. Stalagmites are formations that rise from the floor of caves, built up by mineral deposits left behind as the water drips. Over time, stalactites and stalagmites can grow to meet in the middle and form a column.
No those are stalagmites. stalactites grow from calcite (or mineral) deposits from water dripping from cracks from the ceiling. :) hope this helped
No, stalactites grow from the ceiling of a cavern due to mineral-rich water dripping down and leaving behind deposits that accumulate over time. Stalagmites, on the other hand, grow up from the cave floor as mineral deposits build up from dripping water.
Stalactites hang from the ceiling of caves, formed by the dripping of mineral-rich water. Stalagmites grow up from the floor of caves as the same mineral-rich water drips down. Over time, these formations can meet and grow together to create intricate cave structures.
Stalactites are formations that hang from the ceiling of a cave and are formed by water dripping and leaving mineral deposits behind. Stalagmites are formations that grow up from the cave floor as a result of mineral deposits accumulating from water dripping onto the cave floor. Over time, stalactites and stalagmites can grow towards each other and eventually merge to form a column.
When they join they become a pillar or a column.