No, bedrock cannot be blown up in the traditional sense. In games like minecraft, bedrock is an indestructible block that cannot be mined or destroyed by explosions or any other means. In geological terms, bedrock is the solid rock layer beneath soil and loose material, and while it can be fractured through mining or drilling, it cannot be "blown up" in the way one might destroy softer materials.
Assuming you are not referring to the 'Flintstones - town of Bedrock' and are referring to geological bedrock then any rock that is not part of the soil or an erosional clast (of any size) is bedrock. Bedrock is therefore found everywhere.
The soil horizon that is made up of partially broken bedrock is known as the C horizon. It is located directly beneath the B horizon and consists of weathered rock fragments intermingled with some organic material.
If you are asking for the name of such soils, they are soils formed in residuum, or residual soils. Typically, the soil profile grades into a degraded bedrock called saprolite, with depth, before hiyting hard bedrock.
The main mineral types in bedrock are silicates, which make up the majority of the Earth's crust. These minerals include quartz, feldspar, and mica. Other common minerals found in bedrock are carbonates, such as calcite and dolomite.
Horizon C
just keep digging to up untill you see bedrock then go threw the bedrock and fly up up up up up
that moon is blown up
In survival: Bedrock, ancient debris, obsidian, crying obsidian, End portal frames, End portal, End Gateway, enchanting tables, command blocks, barriers, borders, respawn anchor, block of netherite, anvil, and ender chests can't be blown up by unmodified TNT.
Potatoe chips.
The name of the town in Flintstones is Bedrock.
Bedrock is not a layer of mature residual soil. Bedrock is the solid rock underneath the soil layers that make up the Earth's crust. Residual soil forms from the weathering of bedrock over time.
Assuming you are not referring to the 'Flintstones - town of Bedrock' and are referring to geological bedrock then any rock that is not part of the soil or an erosional clast (of any size) is bedrock. Bedrock is therefore found everywhere.
Bedrock has a blast resistance of 18 million meaning that there is no explosion powerful enough to blow it up.
Bedrock! "from the, town of Bedrock"
The regolith horizon contains large pieces of broken up bedrock. This horizon is composed of fragmented rock material that has undergone weathering processes, making it looser and more fragmented than the underlying unweathered bedrock.
the twin tower's was blown up on September 11 2001!
500% of the people we HAVE BLOWN UP CAME BACK TO LIFE TODAY