Landforms are a result of a combination of constructive and destructive forces. Collection and analysis of data indicates that constructive forces include crustal deformation, faulting, volcanic eruption and deposition of sediment, while destructive forces include weathering and erosion.
Amazing Planet - 2007 Destructive Forces was released on: USA: 21 February 2007
An object with balanced forces acting on it is still. An object with unbalanced forces acting on them moves at an non constant velocity. It is possible for an object to have balanced forces acting on it and yet move in a vacuum.
Two immediate similarities in my mind are that they both possess a bureaucracy to implement their rule and maintain police and/or military forces to control force.
A contact force, including friction, springs, pushes, pulls, requires the two objects to be in contact for the force to exist. On the other hand, non-contact forces do not require contact; the two objects are separated by space, and yet the force exists. This includes gravity, electricity, magnetism, and nuclear forces.
Friction and cohesiveness are the only differences. The matter has stronger potential energy with stronger cohesive forces and the energy has stronger kinetic energy with demonstration as frictional force.
both constructive and destructive forces
constructive and destructive
both constructive and destructive forces
jetties are constructive forces
CONSTRUCTIVE
destruction breeds creation
destructive force wears down rocks while constructive force builds up rock
constructive and destructive forces build up and wear down the crust.
A cliff has neither constructive or destructive forces. However, a cliff was formed as a result of destructive forces eroding at the lands edge leaving a cliff.
Stone Mountain was formed through a series of constructive forces, like volcanic activity and uplift, which pushed the rock to the surface. Over time, destructive forces such as erosion have shaped the mountain into its current form, exposing the granite structure we see today.
constructive
It is made of both constructive and destructive forces... :)