The New Childrens Encyclopedia

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
38

EARTH


Most sedimentary rocks are made
of small particles of other rocks,
transported by water, wind, or
ice. The particles may all be the
same size or a mixture of sizes.
These build up in layers, and
pressure from new layers above
squashes them into hard rock.

Metamorphic rocks These began
as other types of rock but have
been altered by great heat,
pressure, or both, deep inside
the Earth’s crust. Most of the
minerals in the original rock
have changed. These rocks often
show folded or squashed bands.

Rocks


Our planet is a big ball of rock. Rock is what


gives the Earth its features—mountains,


canyons, and plains. Rocks can be massive,


or as small as a grain of sand. All of them


started life deep inside the mantle.


WHAT IS A ROCK?
Rocks are usually made up of several
different minerals. Looking closely at a
rock can tell you a lot about its history.
The shapes of crystals or grains in the rock
and how they fit together reveal whether
the rock is one of three types: igneous,
metamorphic, or sedimentary.

Igneous rocks began as molten rock
deep inside Earth. They are the most
common rocks in the Earth’s crust.
Some were erupted onto the surface
as lava; others solidified underground.
The speed at which they cooled is
shown by the crystals they contain—
big crystals indicate slow cooling.

 STONE CYCLE
Earth’s rocks are
endlessly recycled,
but it takes
millions of years
for rocks to form
and change.

Igneous rocks

Sedimentary rocks Metamorphic rocks
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