It is changed by the vapor that comes from the clouds.
Physical or mechanical weathering
Chemical weathering
Yes it did.
There is little reason for a tsunami to change the climate. Climates are affected by changes in the distribution of warm and cold air. Tsunami don't do this. Tsunami are caused by undersea earthquakes and these generate an insignificant amount of heat, made even more insignificant by the huge heat capacity of the ocean. For a tsunami to affect climate it would have to be caused by a major volcanic eruption. In such a case, the volcanic activity would get the blame, not the water. The only way a tsunami might be more closely related to a climate change would be this: Suppose a tsunami were caused by a huge shifting of the ocean bed and that this caused a major change in an ocean current. That would result in a change in the earth's heat distribution and thus its climate. But still, it's the earthquake getting the blame for both - the tsunami and the climate change.
Chemical change
While it is generally considered a destructive force, a tsunami will move sediments, accelerate weathering, etc.
Physical or mechanical weathering
Physical weathering is breaking down of rocks by weather that does not change their chemical components. Chemical weathering is weathering that breaks rocks down by a chemical change.
Weathering helps. So basically yes, it does .
Chemical weathering
Chemical weathering
Chemical weathering
physical weathering
Temperature change is a physical phrenomenon.
yes it is
Weathering may change the rock into many shapes.
Weathering Change - 2011 was released on: USA: 22 September 2011 (The Woodrow Wilson Center)