Definition
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Water Resistant
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Diatomite is a fine-grained sedimentary rock which is formed from consolidated diatomaceous earth
Fine Grained Rock, Opaque Rock
Decorative Aggregates, Homes, Interior Decoration
Garden Decoration, Paving Stone
As Dimension Stone, Cement Manufacture, Construction Aggregate, for Road Aggregate, Landscaping, Making natural cement, Source of calcium
Alumina Refineries, Animal feed filler, As a Feed Additive for Livestock, Creating Artwork, Drawing on blackboards, Fire resistant, Gymnasts, athletes and mountain climbers use for grip, In aquifers, Soil Conditioner, To ignite fire, Used as a filter medium, Used as an insecticide, Whiting material in toothpaste, paint and paper
Clasts are smooth to touch, Is one of the oldest rock, Smooth to touch, Very fine grained rock
Diatomite rock formed from the skeletal remains of single celled plants called diatoms. When diatoms die, their skeletal remains sink to the bottom of lakes and oceans etc. hence forming diatomite deposit.
Calcite, Clay, Clay Minerals, Quartz, Sand
Biological Weathering, Chemical Weathering, Mechanical Weathering
Chemical Erosion, Coastal Erosion, Wind Erosion
Brunei, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam
Cameroon, Chad, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Sudan, Tanzania, Togo, Zambia, Zimbabwe
England, France, Germany, Spain, United Kingdom
Adelaide, New Zealand, Queensland, Victoria, Yorke Peninsula
Hyaloclastite is an aggregate of fine, glassy debris formed by the sudden contact of hot, coherent magma and cold water or water-saturated sediment
Fine Grained Rock, Opaque Rock
Countertops, Decorative Aggregates, Homes, Interior Decoration
As Building Stone, As Facing Stone, Paving Stone, Garden Decoration, Office Buildings
Building houses or walls, Construction Aggregate
Artifacts, Jewellery, Monuments, Sculpture
Cemetery Markers, Creating Artwork
Welded tuff, Rhyolitic tuff, Basaltic tuff, Trachyte tuff and Andesitic tuff.
Always found as volcanic pipes over deep continental crust
Hyaloclastite is a type of Igneous rock is formed through the cooling and solidification of lava or magma.
Hydrogen Sulfide, Sulfur Dioxide
Burial Metamorphism, Cataclastic Metamorphism, Contact Metamorphism, Hydrothermal Metamorphism
Biological Weathering, Chemical Weathering, Mechanical Weathering
Chemical Erosion, Coastal Erosion