The rocks in this picture are found on the coast of Canada. How do you think these structures were formed? Google up how high tides are at the Hope Well Rocks and in Portland Maine.
88 comments:
Rand N.
said...
I think that there was a mud side and it draged the rocks down to where they are now.
The rocks were eroded by the water at the bottom. The water slowly eroded the side of the rock until it became what it is today. It is still eroding today if the water is still there.
I think the rock formations were formed by maybe the water level was higher and the water eroded the rock and as the water level kept dropping lower, the water kept eroding away at the rocks.
I think they were formed by water eroding rocks and the water level lowering and the rocks are now showing because the water level lowered.....That is my theory, plus I like whoopy pies Holly.
I think the rocks were once small mesas and they were of the same width all along. However, I think wave and water erosion eroded away much of the base of the rocks, making them look as they are now.
I think it used to be on solid piece of sand/mud/rock. Then waves and tide slowely picks up pieces of mud. As the mud washed away. And it left the rock structures.
The bottom of the rocks are all eroded away so it looks like they might even fall over. The water probably eroded the bottom of the rock because that's as far as the water could reach on the rocks. The internet was being stupid though, so I have no info from it. :)
I think that the rock formations could have formed by having lots and lots of waves crash against the shoreline slowly eroding the rock, it's only eroded at the bottom because when the tide comes in and the waves crash against only the bottom and erode only the bottom. High tides at Hopewell are very strange, the water advances enough that you could kayac.
The rocks were probably eroded by the tide. As the tide comes in and out, it rubs up against the rocks taking away bits and pieces of it. The reason why only the bottom half of the rocks are eroded is because that's how high the water level is at high tide. The high tide at Hopewell Rocks in Portland, Maine is fifty feet high.
I think that they were formed by crashing water against the rocks. And, I couldn't find the hope well tides in Portland Maine. 50 feet high by the Hopewell tides and 9 feet tides in Portland Maine.
88 comments:
I think that there was a mud side and it draged the rocks down to where they are now.
by wind erosion
wind and waves crashing against them
i think that the tide would come in and go out so it caused the rock to be eroded by the water
The rocks were eroded by the water at the bottom. The water slowly eroded the side of the rock until it became what it is today. It is still eroding today if the water is still there.
I think they were formed over time by the tide and the water and maybe some storms.
i mean water erosion i'm smarticals :)
I think these rocks formed from wind erosion.
I think that they were big rocks and that after awhile water erosion it wash the sides away.
maybe there was a wind erosion and it broke down the rocks.
They are skinnier at the bottom. That is probably where some water eroded the rock.
Millions of years of water erosion formed them
I think they were formed by the water pushing the sand up over the rocks.
i think its by wind erosion!
i think they were full rocks and the water kept crashing into them and they formed those weird shapes
the water erosion deformed the rock.
I think the statues formed by waves crashing up against them and the rock became eroded by the water.
I think that the water was once high then it went down and it eroded it down as the water went down.
I think the water erodes it to form weird shapes.
I think they formed by wind erosion and maybe storms or waves.
Water used to be water up to the to the top of the island things and then water eroded the bottoms almost all the way then the water went down.
They were probably broken down by the water rising and falling.
channel is creating the weathering that is makeing these rocks like this.
water erosion might have broken up the rocks
I think that in the beginning those rock formations were like almost like a circle thingy and then the wind and water broke it away to these shapes.
wind and waves crashing against them
Emily M
I think that they formed by water coming in and out of the shore line and eroded the rock.
Water Erosion is at work i believe
water erosion!!!
water erosion.
I think the rocks were formed by wind erosion.
water erosin might have broken up the rocks and made them into smaller pieces
I think it was water erosion.
Waves crashing into rock.
I think it would be Water Erosion!!!!! ;) <3
The rocks might have been eroded by water
i think it had to do with water erosion.
water eroison
I think that they were big rocks and that after awhile water erosion it wash the sides away.
i think the structures were eroded into what they are in the picture
I think that these rocks w ere formed because of the glaciers in the iceage.
i think they were formed by water erosion
i think they were formed by water erosion
I think that rocks have destroyed it down so it ends up like those rocks.
I think these structures were created by water erosion. When the water passed by the rocks so many time it starts to wear them down.
I think it was eroded by wind, water, and gravity.
I think the rock formations were formed by maybe the water level was higher and the water eroded the rock and as the water level kept dropping lower, the water kept eroding away at the rocks.
i think that these rocks were formed by the water. then after many years the water level has droped to where it is now and these rock formations.
I think they were formed by water eroding rocks and the water level lowering and the rocks are now showing because the water level lowered.....That is my theory, plus I like whoopy pies Holly.
I think the rocks were once small mesas and they were of the same width all along. However, I think wave and water erosion eroded away much of the base of the rocks, making them look as they are now.
I think it was water erosion in the form of waves and tides.
I think they were formed by waves pounding the stones.
From water erosion.
I think it used to be on solid piece of sand/mud/rock. Then waves and tide slowely picks up pieces of mud. As the mud washed away. And it left the rock structures.
NO i am not doing this blog!
I think they were formed by water erosion like tides.
They have the same high tide because both places are on the same bay.
From water erosion is the reason
These structures most likely formed over time by the tide going in and out and weathering the rocks.
they were eroded by the tides coming in and out and over a very long time then the salt water wore it away to look like cool shapes
The bottom of the rocks are all eroded away so it looks like they might even fall over. The water probably eroded the bottom of the rock because that's as far as the water could reach on the rocks. The internet was being stupid though, so I have no info from it. :)
I noticed that there was water in the background and I think that the waves eroded the rock over time.
The tides are 52 feet at the Hopewell Rocks, and the tides are around 9 or 10 feet.
I think that the rock formations could have formed by having lots and lots of waves crash against the shoreline slowly eroding the rock, it's only eroded at the bottom because when the tide comes in and the waves crash against only the bottom and erode only the bottom.
High tides at Hopewell are very strange, the water advances enough that you could kayac.
The rocks were formed by water coming up and sweeping the rocks out and eroded them down then the water socked into the sand
The rocks were probably eroded by the tide. As the tide comes in and out, it rubs up against the rocks taking away bits and pieces of it. The reason why only the bottom half of the rocks are eroded is because that's how high the water level is at high tide. The high tide at Hopewell Rocks in Portland, Maine is fifty feet high.
I think the tides can go up really high because I saw a picture of the rocks and they looked weather at the highest point.
"The high tide can be as high as 16 metres (52 ft) giving The Hopewell Rocks one of the highest average tides in the world.[2]" Wikipedia
I'm guessing they were formed by sand being eroded away and only bare rock being left behind. They are about 50 feet high.
Portland's tides are about nine feet high.
I think these structures were formed by wind erosion.
I think that they were formed by crashing water against the rocks. And, I couldn't find the hope well tides in Portland Maine. 50 feet high by the Hopewell tides and 9 feet tides in Portland Maine.
i think this happened by weather erosion
I think that they were formed bu crashing water rocks wind erosion and gravity :)
i think the structures were eroded into what they are in the picture
I think it used to be on solid piece of sand/mud/rock. Then waves and tide slowely picks up pieces of mud. As the mud washed away.
the rocks are not good in portland because there are no very high tides that would come up high anoufgh to hit the rocks
I think by wind and the water hitting agenst it.
1. water 2. wind and 3. rocks.
i think the rocks were formed by erosion and by chemical weathering
The water tides are eroding the rocks and making them look like that
water erosion :)
Portland, ME tides are around nine feet high.
i think the rock was formed by water
From water eriosion
its 50ft high by the Hopewell tides and 9ft tides in Portland Maine.
Water erosion
i think that they were formed by water erosion
there are 6 hours and 13 minities.
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