No, sedimentary rock does not start off as a liquid. It originates from the accumulation and compaction of sediments, which can include fragments of other rocks, minerals, and organic material. These sediments are typically deposited in layers and eventually lithified through processes such as compaction and cementation, turning them into solid rock.
Sandstone can metamorphose into quartzite.
Thunder eggs are technically both sedimentary and igneous rocks. They are formed when gas bubbles in volcanic lava solidify and are later filled with various minerals, such as quartz. So, they have characteristics of both sedimentary (formed through deposition) and igneous (formed through cooling of magma or lava) rocks.
Shale is a type of sedimentary rock that tends to break along its natural bedding planes, making it prone to breaking easily along these planes. However, shale can also be strong and resistant to weathering depending on its composition and the amount of compaction it has undergone.
Sedimentary rock can be changed into igneous rock by undergoing melting and then solidification. At a subduction zone (at a convergent plate boundary, where one plate slides beneath another), layers of sedimentary rock will be assimilated into the mantle. Some areas may undergo enough heating to actually melt, especially if there is water or carbon dioxide trapped in the rock. If this rock later makes it to the surface and cools, it will become an igneous rock. Another area where sedimentary rock could be changed into igneous rock is on the interior of a composite volcano -- The heat and force of the magma could break off chunks of volcanic welded tuff, causing it to melt. If the volcano then erupts, the former sedimentary rock would be incorporated into the lava and solidify into igneous rock.
When the mountains got eroded, sediments broke off, and rolled down the mountain into the lowlands, that were oceans at the time, and the pressure from all the rocks fused them together, making it a sheet of sedimentary rock
It melts then cools off
Sandstone can metamorphose into quartzite.
Any Size depends on where is is located and how long it sits before it breaks off
== == Quartz is actually a silicate mineral that appears in metamorphic, sedimentary, and igneous rocks.
This type of sedimentary rock must have organic material to be created. They are called organic because they are made from organic material such as grass or plankton that, over long periods of time, becomes a type of sedimentary rock. This organic material can be the organism itself or may be given off from the organism.
Thunder eggs are technically both sedimentary and igneous rocks. They are formed when gas bubbles in volcanic lava solidify and are later filled with various minerals, such as quartz. So, they have characteristics of both sedimentary (formed through deposition) and igneous (formed through cooling of magma or lava) rocks.
A rock cycle starts off as magma. Then as the magma cools, crystals form, and eventually the magma solidify into igneous rocks. The process breaks down into sedimentary rocks. The processes change a pre-existing igneous or sedimentary rock into a new rock called metamorphic rocks, then it melts into magma and the process starts all over.
Cooling a liquid turns it into a solid. I.E. Freezing water into ice, or magma cooling into rock.
Research has shown that it is not always very easy to identify sedimentary rocks with the naked eye. It has been stated that sedimentary rocks are porous and may contain small holes. Also, if one is to rub the rock and small grains tend to come off it might also be sedimentary.
Shale is a type of sedimentary rock that tends to break along its natural bedding planes, making it prone to breaking easily along these planes. However, shale can also be strong and resistant to weathering depending on its composition and the amount of compaction it has undergone.
Sedimentary rock can be changed into igneous rock by undergoing melting and then solidification. At a subduction zone (at a convergent plate boundary, where one plate slides beneath another), layers of sedimentary rock will be assimilated into the mantle. Some areas may undergo enough heating to actually melt, especially if there is water or carbon dioxide trapped in the rock. If this rock later makes it to the surface and cools, it will become an igneous rock. Another area where sedimentary rock could be changed into igneous rock is on the interior of a composite volcano -- The heat and force of the magma could break off chunks of volcanic welded tuff, causing it to melt. If the volcano then erupts, the former sedimentary rock would be incorporated into the lava and solidify into igneous rock.
When the mountains got eroded, sediments broke off, and rolled down the mountain into the lowlands, that were oceans at the time, and the pressure from all the rocks fused them together, making it a sheet of sedimentary rock