yes. because anything you can feel is an example of matter
When rocks change form in the rock cycle, you see an example of the conservation of matter, where the total amount of matter in the system remains constant. This means that rocks may transform through processes like erosion, deposition, heat, and pressure, but the total mass of the rocks remains the same throughout the cycle.
yes. because anything you can feel is an example of matter
Some rocks are made of matter that was never living (e.g. meteoric rocks, igneous rocks, moon rocks) and some rocks are made of matter that was once part of living things (e.g. limestone rocks, marble rocks, iron ore rocks) and some rocks might be a mixture of matter that was never living and matter that was once part of living things (e.g. sandstone rocks, mudstone rocks, shale rocks, slate rocks).
Anything that has mass is matter.
volcanic rocks
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When rocks change form in the rock cycle, we see an example of the conservation of mass. This principle states that the total mass of the rock remains constant throughout the cycle, even as it undergoes various processes such as weathering, erosion, and sedimentation.
When rocks change form in the rock cycle, you see an example of the conservation of matter, where the total amount of matter in the system remains constant. This means that rocks may transform through processes like erosion, deposition, heat, and pressure, but the total mass of the rocks remains the same throughout the cycle.
The conservation of matter.
yes. because anything you can feel is an example of matter