weathering, erosion, and compaction.
erosion/weathering
Erosion deposits sediment.
Sediment can change into sedimentary rock through a process called lithification, which involves compaction and cementation. As layers of sediment accumulate, the weight of the overlying material compresses the deeper layers, reducing their volume. Additionally, minerals precipitate from water that percolates through the sediments, binding the particles together to form solid rock. Over time, this process transforms loose sediment into cohesive sedimentary rock.
Mechanical weathering.
Sedimentary rock can be broken down into sediment through processes like weathering, erosion, and transportation. However, this process takes a very long time and is influenced by various factors such as temperature, pressure, and geological conditions. It is a natural cycle where sediment can be transformed into sedimentary rock and then back into sediment over millions of years.
Weathering and erosion
erosion/weathering
The most powerful geologic forces are air and water; they change mountain ranges into soil and silt.
Erosion deposits sediment.
it is called sediment,the rock would stay froze it wont change what so ever
Sediment can change into sedimentary rock through a process called lithification, which involves compaction and cementation. As layers of sediment accumulate, the weight of the overlying material compresses the deeper layers, reducing their volume. Additionally, minerals precipitate from water that percolates through the sediments, binding the particles together to form solid rock. Over time, this process transforms loose sediment into cohesive sedimentary rock.
Granite can be changed into gneiss through the process of metamorphism, where heat and pressure alter the mineral structure of the rock. This process causes the minerals in the granite to recrystallize, forming distinct banding and foliation characteristic of gneiss. The original minerals in the granite are reorganized into new minerals such as mica, quartz, and feldspar, giving gneiss its unique appearance.
The rock cycle describes how rocks are formed, and how they change to sedimentary rock, to metamorphic rock, to magma, to igneous rock, to sediment, and back to sedimentary rock.
The process that creates sedimentary rock from sediment is called lithification. This process involves compaction, where the weight of overlying sediments squeezes the sediment grains together, and cementation, where minerals in the groundwater crystallize and bind the sediment grains together to form solid rock.
The process is called lithification, which involves the compaction and cementation of sediment to form sedimentary rock.
Gypsum is a mineral that was formed by layers of sediment , fine particles, that were deposited over a period of time, and then subjected to geologic forces.
Mechanical weathering.