Eroded rock can either be transported by water or wind to new locations, where it may settle and form new sedimentary rock layers. Alternatively, eroded rock can be broken down further into smaller particles and eventually become part of the soil composition.
An igneous rock can either be weathered and eroded into sediment, which may then become compacted and cemented to form a sedimentary rock, or it can be subjected to heat and pressure to recrystallize and create a metamorphic rock.
What two thing's change a sedimentary rock into a metamorphic rock
vvvl ck
since igneous rocks are more dense than the other two rock types, they will not as easily erode away and hence maintain the structure of the ancient volcano
I think the two things for population of species if they do not adapt. The answer I think is sea turtles,and salmon.
it gets melted into magma, then it is cooled into igneous rock.
The erosion rate depends on the type of rock or soil being eroded, as well as the intensity and duration of the erosive forces acting on it.
Two different things that move eroded materials are water, such as rivers and streams, and wind. Water carries sediment and eroded materials downstream or deposits them along shorelines, while wind can transport smaller particles like sand and dust over long distances.
An igneous rock can either be weathered and eroded into sediment, which may then become compacted and cemented to form a sedimentary rock, or it can be subjected to heat and pressure to recrystallize and create a metamorphic rock.
It could be weathered forming sediments, or it could be subducted at a plate margin, melt and form magma.
Two things that have mass are an apple and a rock.
What two thing's change a sedimentary rock into a metamorphic rock
Metamorphic rocks can melt into magma and then undergo cooling and crystallization to become an igneous rock. Or, they can undergo weathering and erosion into sediments and then lithify to become sedimentary rocks. +++ They can melt and become magma only if subducted - a process normally confined to the sea-floor plate.
Weathering or melt.
Intense heat and pressure.
vvvl ck
An angular unconformity, which is what I think you mean, is not a rock type. It denotes the junction of two strata of rocks where the lower one was tilted by tectonic forces, eroded, then overlain with horizontal parallel strata.