Section 1: A Mixture of such minerals, rock, fragments, volcanic glass, organic matter, or other natural material.
Rock
Section 2: When magma reaches Earth's surface and flows from volcanoes.
Lava
Section 2: Light-colored rocks of a lower density than basaltic rocks.
Granitic (Igneous Rocks)
Section 4: Loose materials such as rock fragments, Mineral grains, and bits of shell that have been moved by wind, water, ice, or gravity.
Sediment
Section 1: Illustrates the process that create and change rocks.
OR
Model Showing Process that create and change rock.
Rock Cycle
Section 2: When hot magma cools and hardens.
Igneous Rock
Section 3: Temperature and Pressure or Pressure if Heat watery fluids.
Section 4: Forms when sediments are pressed and cemented together, or when minerals form from solutions.
Sedimentary Rock
Section 2: Rocks that form from magma below the surface.
Intrusive (Igneous Rocks)
Section 3: Mineral Grains line up in Parallel layers, the metamorphic rock.
Foliated
Section 4: Sediments are small, they can stick together and form a solid rock.
Compaction
Section 2: Formed as lava cools on the surface of Earth.
Extrusive (Igneous Rocks)
Section 3: Mineral Grains grow and rearrange, but they don't form layers.
Non-Foliated
Section 4: Occurs when minerals such as quartz, calcite, and hematite are deposited between the pieces of sediment.
Cementation
Section 2: Dense, dark-colored rocks, formed from magma that is rich in iron and magnesium and poor in silca, which is the compound SiO2
Basaltic (Igneous Rocks)