Yes. It's the same substance, just in smaller pieces.
Usually not, it is mostly the mechanical action of rocks rubbing against each other.
Burning wood is a chemical change - although, like most chemical changes it is accompanied by a physical change. Usually we reserve the term physical changes for things like erosion, melting, or evaporation where no change in composition occurs.
Erosion, transportation of the eroded material, deposition of this material then lithification.
Well, first of all, there is chemical and physical changes. Erosion can happen by the water constantly hitting the sand or rocks and causing them to change.
Physical
It is physical change
Erosion changes the physical surface by removing part of the surface. This can be inform of abrasion or eroding away components of the surface.
This is a physical change because wind and erosion are part of the physical category. Chemical change is where things happen involving actual chemicals . Wether the chemicals are from nature or not , Chemicals are chemicals. hope this helped ;] ~Lily
I'm 13 and I know for a fact that soil erosion is physically changed.
Erosion includes a physical change to rocks.Her physical change was so dramatic her friends hardly recognized her.Dieting causes a physical change to body appearance.
Yes. It can be observed without changing the chemical composition of the substance.
Physical. No chemical reaction has taken place, the riverbed has simply moved from one place to another. By Olivia Fisher
The answer is a sandstone cliff that is exposed to the weather goes through physical changes as it gradually erodes in the wwind and rain
Your kidding, but an example is erosion, you can move it,keeping molecular structure, simple wander is a reverseable change
Pressure, heat, & erosion. There are chemical, physical, and biological changes.
They are both the result of physical change brought about by natural forces such as wind or water.
the answer to the question how does erosion change the land is basically the definition of erosion