Igneous Rock
The eroded glacial material found on the valley floor of a glacier is known as glacial till. This sediment consists of a mixture of clay, silt, sand, gravel, and boulders that have been transported and deposited by the glacier as it advances and retreats. Glacial till is typically unsorted and unstratified, reflecting the diverse range of materials that glaciers grind and carry from the landscape. When the glacier melts, this material is left behind, contributing to the formation of features like moraines and outwash plains.
Wind eroded rocks are found mostly in arid regions, i.e. Desert Topography. Rocks eroded by wind are of different types and structures and are called different names depending on its form and agent of formation. The names given to some wind eroded rocks are; 1. Inselberg. 2. Rock Pedestals. 3. Zeugen.
Granite is found on the continents in areas where the Earth's crust has been deeply eroded. The most common place to find granite would be anywhere overlying rock and sediment have eroded away the material above plutons causing granite to be exposed at the surface.
To halt the erosion of the bare dirt found there. Eroded surface material can clog storm sewers.
A wind-eroded depression is commonly referred to as a "blowout." These features are formed in sandy or loose sediment areas where strong winds remove material, creating a hollow or dip in the landscape. Blowouts are often found in deserts or coastal regions and can vary in size, depending on the intensity of the wind and the type of sediment involved.
It is the chlorophyll pigment. They are in chloroplasts.
The green material or pigment found in plants is called chlorophyll. This material is found in the chloroplasts of a plant cell.
== == After a rock has been eroded you will find dirt,sand,rock and occcasionally silk.
Tendons.
Decaying material in the soil is called, "Humus". (HYOO-muss)
It is called cellulose.It is a structural polysaccharide.
The prominent sea floor feature found in the central Atlantic ocean is called the Mid Atlantic Ridge.