sedimentary rock can form rock such as sandstone that the Egyptian pyramids were built of or they can form the chalk that is used to write on the ground or on a black board.
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weathering of preexisting rocks form clastic sedimentary rocks, Oversaturated water basins form chemical sedimentary rocks after the water evaporates and dead sea organisms settle at the bottom forming biochemical sedimentary rocks.
Sedimentary rocks can be both chemically and mechanically weathered.
No, because a sedimentary rock is formed from pieces of other rocks.
No matter what kinds of rocks they are they can be changed into any other kind of rock. Sedimentary rocks and igneous rocks can become metamorphic rocks with either contact or regional metamorphism. This means that either the rocks have been in contact with or close to high heat and high pressure that changes the rock.
The wind blows around dirt and sediment, and then that dirt solidifies into sedimentary rocks.
Sedimentary rocks are some kind of rock that i forgot about
They are called clastic sedimentary rocks.
make a loaf of bread and it eat this is sedimentrary rocks
Igneous Rocks, metamorphic rocks, and sedimentary rocks
heat and pressure.
Sedimentary rocks make up about 75% of Earth's crust by volume, while igneous rocks make up about 15-20%. Sedimentary rocks form through processes like erosion, deposition, and cementation, while igneous rocks form from the cooling of molten magma.
Sam Boggs has written: 'Petrology of sedimentary rocks' -- subject(s): Sedimentary Rocks 'Petrology of sedimentary rocks' -- subject(s): Rocks, Sedimentary, Sedimentary Rocks
No, sedimentary rocks formed from fragments of other rocks are called clastic sedimentary rocks. Chemical sedimentary rocks form from minerals that are dissolved in water and precipitate out to form rocks like limestone or halite.
Yes all fossils occur in sedimentary rocks or rocks that began as sedimentary rocks.
Sedimentary rocks are extremely common. Many use them in small, thin pieces to make stepping stones across their yards.
igneous, sedimentary, metamorphic