Interview Questions Answers.ORG
Interviewer And Interviewee Guide
Interviews
Quizzes
Home
Quizzes
Interviews School Education Interviews:Academic WriterAccuplacer TestACT (American College Testing)AnthropologyAssistant College PrincipalAstronomyBiochemistryBiologyCase StudyCertified Accounting Technician (CAT)ChemistryCollegeDepartment of Motor Vehicles (DMV)Discrete MathEarth ScienceEcologyElectron MicroscopistEnglish LanguageFemale PrincipalGeneral AptitudeGeneral Educational Development (GED)General ScienceGeographyGeologyGeometricGMATGRE (Removed DMCA)HistoryLSAT (Law School Admission Test)Mass CommunicationMathematicsMCAT (Medical College Admission Test)MetallurgyNatural Language Processing EngineerPeachtreePhilosophyPhysical EducationPhysiologyPlacement PapersPolio Eradication OfficerPolitical SciencePSAT/NMSQTPsychiatryPsychologyResume PhrasesSATScienceStaticsStatisticianSurveyTOEFLWASL TestZoology/Botany
Copyright © 2018. All Rights Reserved
Geology Interview Question:
How do minerals become rocks and rocks become soil?
Submitted by: AdministratorMinerals or small particles of rocks, become rocks through pressure and temperature, often deep inside the earth's core, or simply through pressure for instance on the seabed.
Wherever many small things become something big it is usually through compression, temperature, or pressure.
The opposite process - large things being worn into smaller particles - usually comes through another sort of force. Either weathering, erosion - action by wind, rain, and water - is responsible.
Gradually many rocks are eroded by movement of ice and water over them or the wind action also to become finer and finer and form little grains - e.g. of sand or of soil.
Submitted by: Administrator
Wherever many small things become something big it is usually through compression, temperature, or pressure.
The opposite process - large things being worn into smaller particles - usually comes through another sort of force. Either weathering, erosion - action by wind, rain, and water - is responsible.
Gradually many rocks are eroded by movement of ice and water over them or the wind action also to become finer and finer and form little grains - e.g. of sand or of soil.
Submitted by: Administrator
Copyright 2007-2024 by Interview Questions Answers .ORG All Rights Reserved.
https://InterviewQuestionsAnswers.ORG.
https://InterviewQuestionsAnswers.ORG.