Yes it is
Yes. It's all part of the rock cycle.
An example that is not part of the rock cycle would be a volcanic eruption, where molten rock (magma) is expelled from Earth's interior onto its surface. This event is a singular occurrence and does not illustrate the continuous processes of rock formation, transformation, and recycling that make up the rock cycle.
The biochemical cycles that move materials between land, air, and water affect the atmosphere, the biosphere (living organisms), and the geosphere (rock and soil formations) on Earth. This includes cycles like the water cycle, carbon cycle, nitrogen cycle, and phosphorus cycle.
Marble is a metamorphic rock, which means it has undergone transformation from its original rock form through heat and pressure. In the rock cycle, marble is currently in the metamorphic rock stage.
by being part of mechanical weathering
Photosynthesis.
is a volcanic eruption part of the rock cycle
is a volcanic eruption part of the rock cycle
No rock could be a biochemical.
sedimentary rock
They all are part of the rock cycle
compaction and cementation are the only parts of the rock cycle that cannot be observed.
In Death Valley, stages of the rock cycle that are apparent are stages in which the rock is a rock. once it becomes sand, it is part of the sandusky cycle.
Heat from the earth's core, via the magma drives the tectonic part of the rock cycle. This heat is derived mainly from radioactive fission of the heavy elements in the Core.Gravity drives much of the weathering part of the rock cycle. Via evaporation of water, and rain and rivers, and glaciation.Some solar radiation also energizes part of the weathering part of the rock cycle.
Yes. It's all part of the rock cycle.
Magma
its part of the rock cycle