No. Chemical weathering results in a change of the chemistry of the rock and the minerals therein.
Common minerals like feldspars and metals are pieces of rock that are made from the same matter that created planets
yes because it is made of all different minerals
Yes, contact with magma can alter the minerals of a rock through a process called contact metamorphism. This occurs when the heat and fluids from the magma interact with the surrounding rock, causing recrystallization of minerals and the formation of new minerals.
The competitive evolution principle is often called Gause's Law of Competitive Exclusion. This principle states that two different species competing for the same things cannot coexist.
competition
They all contain minerals.
No. Rocks are combinations of minerals.
No. Rocks are combinations of minerals.
Rhyolite.
The remora has learned to coexist with the shark.
Yes. For example gabbro and basalt are chemically equivalent (and so are composed of the same minerals), however gabbro is intrusive and basalt is extrusive.
No, rock and stone are not the same thing. Rocks are made up of one or more minerals, while stones are small pieces of rock.
I don't think rocks can be any colour because a group of the same type of rock contain the same minerals which would make all that type of rock the same colour
No. Chemical weathering results in a change of the chemistry of the rock and the minerals therein.
Common minerals like feldspars and metals are pieces of rock that are made from the same matter that created planets
Yes ,in same forest .