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  2. List of rock formations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rock_formations

    Metamorphic rocks are created by rocks that have been transformed into another kind of rock, usually by some combination of heat, pressure, and chemical alteration. Sedimentary rocks are created by a variety of processes but usually involving deposition, grain by grain, layer by layer, in water or, in the case of terrestrial sediments, on land ...

  3. Flowstone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flowstone

    Flowstones are sheetlike deposits of calcite or other carbonate minerals, formed where water flows down the walls or along the floors of a cave. [1] They are typically found in "solution caves", in limestone, where they are the most common speleothem. However, they may form in any type of cave where water enters that has picked up dissolved ...

  4. Caliche - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caliche

    These precipitate as water evaporates and carbon dioxide is lost. This water movement forms a caliche that is close to the surface. [7] Caliche can also form on outcrops of porous rocks or in rock fissures where water is trapped and evaporates. [8] In general, caliche deposition is a slow process, requiring several thousand years. [3]

  5. Tufa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tufa

    Tufa columns at Mono Lake, California. Tufa is a variety of limestone formed when carbonate minerals precipitate out of water in unheated rivers or lakes. Geothermally heated hot springs sometimes produce similar (but less porous) carbonate deposits, which are known as travertine or thermogene travertine.

  6. Formation of rocks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Formation_of_rocks

    This article discusses how rocks are formed. There are also articles on physical rock formations, rock layerings , and the formal naming of geologic formations. Terrestrial rocks are formed by three main mechanisms: Sedimentary rocks are formed through the gradual accumulation of sediments: for example, sand on a beach or mud on a river bed. As ...

  7. Speleogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speleogenesis

    Speleogenesis is the origin and development of caves, the primary process that determines essential features of the hydrogeology of karst and guides its evolution. It often deals with the development of caves through limestone, caused by the presence of water with carbon dioxide dissolved within it, producing carbonic acid which permits the dissociation of the calcium carbonate in the limestone.

  8. Omarolluk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omarolluk

    There is uncertainty on how to translate the proper name Omarolluk (and omar rocks). According to the records of the Canada Centre for Mapping and Earth Observation Natural Resources, the features Omarolluk Sound and Omarolluk Formation were named after Omarolluk, an Inuk man who accompanied and guided R. J. Flaherty on numerous geological surveys of the Belcher Islands and elsewhere in the ...

  9. Soda straw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soda_straw

    A soda straw can turn into a stalactite if the hole at the bottom is blocked, or if the water begins flowing on the outside surface of the hollow tube. Soda straws can also form outside the cave environment on exposed concrete surfaces as a type of calthemite, growing significantly faster than those formed on rock.