Texture
Texture is the word used to describe a rock's constituent mineral size and arrangement, visible on a freshly fractured surface. Because a rock's surface can be weathered to a smooth or polished surface, the way it feels is not usually included in a description of texture.
nonconformity
Rocks that were formed when molten rock cooled down are called igneous rocks. This process occurs either beneath the Earth's surface, resulting in intrusive (or plutonic) igneous rocks, or on the surface after a volcanic eruption, leading to extrusive (or volcanic) igneous rocks. Common examples include granite for intrusive rocks and basalt for extrusive rocks. The texture and composition of igneous rocks can vary significantly based on the cooling rate and the mineral content of the molten rock.
Lava.
The term that describes the falling of volcanic ash to the Earth's surface is "tephra." Tephra encompasses all airborne volcanic materials, including ash, pumice, and volcanic rocks, that are expelled during an eruption. As these materials settle, they can accumulate on the ground, impacting the environment and human activities.
Texture is the word used to describe a rock's constituent mineral size and arrangement, visible on a freshly fractured surface. Because a rock's surface can be weathered to a smooth or polished surface, the way it feels is not usually included in a description of texture.
wind, fire, water
nonconformity
sounds like erosionA2. This describes freeze-thaw spalling of rocks.
Meteoroids are small chunks of rocks and debris in space that travel through Earth's atmosphere and hit its surface.
Intrusive rocks are igneous rocks that form beneath the Earth's surface from the cooling and solidification of magma. They often have coarse-grained textures due to slower cooling, and examples include diorite, granite, and gabbro. Intrusive rocks are typically associated with plutonic formations and can be exposed at the Earth's surface through uplifting and erosion.
PUMICE. Pumice is created by volcanic activity. It looks different from other rocks and even feels light when you hold it in your hand, but it's a genuine rock.
igneous rocks that form on earth's surface
Sedimentary rocks form on the Earth's crust, and can form metamorphic rocks when buried. Igneous rocks form under the surface, or when liquid magma reaches the surface as lava.
Lava.
Magma is under the surface of Earth's crust. Rocks on earth's surface are well ... on Earth's surface. Magma is also molten rock, not solid rock like the rocks on earth's surface.
Reverse Fault