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…Well, that certainly narrows it down, thank you.
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+-SH safe2261913 +-SH screencap302203 +-SH apple bloom62090 +-SH maud pie15575 +-SH g42122335 +-SH hearthbreakers1328 +-SH my little pony: friendship is magic267257 +-SH animated131346 +-SH crystal4455 +-SH discovery family2004 +-SH discovery family logo12660 +-SH female1902776 +-SH geology38 +-SH rock6641 +-SH subtitles2645
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I want to say I recall learning about the subject before High School even. Like middle or elementary school science class (and the Magic Schoolbus video games). But I think there-in lies the problem: people like myself learn about it at such a young age and then do nothing with it for so long that we basically forget it or it gets muddled with newer information.
Yep, 40%-65%
Minecraft Obsidian forms at any level where water runs over standing pools of lava, including naturally occurring surface patches.
There are three general types of rocks in terms of formation: sedimentary, igneous, and metamorphic.
Sedimentary are rocks that form from other minerals that were broken down. That’s usually done through pressure and time. Less so heat. Shale. Limestone.
Igneous rocks form from magma or lava that cools and hardens. You can think of it like ice. The solid point of water is just really low compared to rocks. Obsidian is an example, iirc.
Metamorphic rocks are rocks that undergo change through a combination of heat and pressure. They become “plastic” and malleable but are under such pressure, they change shape and structure without becoming magma liquid.
So Maud is probably talking about some igneous rock.
u mean obsidian?
It’s not even close to what she said!