by weathering
weathering,erosion, and deposition
Erosion transports weathered material from all three rock types in the rock cycle to a point of deposition where it can lithify into sedimentary rock.
weather the rock is weather, eroded, or goes through deposition.
Processes affecting the surface of the Earth and part of the Rock Cycle.
The rock cycle occurs over millions of years and involves processes such as weathering, erosion, deposition, metamorphism, and melting. The speed of the rock cycle can vary depending on the specific geological conditions and the type of rocks involved.
No, in the rock cycle, material is not lost. Rocks undergo different processes such as weathering, erosion, and deposition as they move through the cycle, but the material is just transformed from one type of rock to another.
The endpoint of the rock cycle is the formation of a new rock from the weathering, erosion, deposition, compaction, and cementation of existing rocks. This process is continuous and cyclical, with rocks transitioning between the three types: igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks.
(Orogenesis) - Melting, Eruption, Cooling, Crystallization, Solidification. (Diagnesis) - Weathering, Erosion, Transportation, Deposition, Stratification, Cementation, Lithification, Sedimentation. (Metamorphism) - Heating, Pressurization, Stress, Deformation, Recrystallization.
The process by which rocks are formed is called the rock cycle. This cycle involves the formation, weathering, erosion, deposition, and compaction of rocks over time through various geological processes.
weathering,erosion, deposition,compaction,cenentation,metaorphism,melting,cooling and solidfication
Erosion and deposition are the parts of the cycle that shape and reshape land. Erosion by water, wind, or ice removes soil and rock, while deposition involves the settling of eroded materials in new locations, changing the landscape over time.