Stratified rocks are like pages in a storybook, each page is a layer made by nature over time.
Imagine you're stacking up your favorite snacks in a jar. You put some cereal first, then some nuts, then some gummy bears, and keep going until the jar is full. Each snack group is like a layer of rock. Over many years, tiny pieces of rock, like sand or mud, settle down in water, one after another, just like how you stack your snacks.
How Layers Form
When water moves slowly, it carries small bits of rock and soil. These bits drop to the bottom, forming a layer. If the water gets calm again, more bits settle on top of the first layer, just like when you add another snack group after the first one.
This process happens over thousands of years, with each new layer showing what happened at that time. Sometimes, there are even breaks in the layers, like if you shook the jar and mixed everything up before adding more snacks!
So next time you see rocks stacked neatly, imagine them as a tasty snack jar from long ago! Stratified rocks are like pages in a storybook, each page is a layer made by nature over time.
Imagine you're stacking up your favorite snacks in a jar. You put some cereal first, then some nuts, then some gummy bears, and keep going until the jar is full. Each snack group is like a layer of rock. Over many years, tiny pieces of rock, like sand or mud, settle down in water, one after another, just like how you stack your snacks.
Examples
- Layers form like pages in a book when dirt settles slowly.
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See also
- What is diagenesis?
- What is basalt?
- What is sedimentary?
- What are felsic rocks?
- Can a mountain turn into a volcano?