Science, asked by samriddhigoyal4085, 7 months ago

In land formations, what is a reef?

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Answered by 1ranker1
0

Answer:

A reef is a shoal of rock, sand, coral or similar material, lying beneath the surface of water. Many reefs result from natural, abiotic processes—deposition of sand, wave erosion planing down rock ...

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Answered by shariqhamadmi
0

Answer:

The true definition of a reef is a ridge of a rock or any other type of land that extends some distance just under the the surface of the water.  The type of reef that we are going to focus on and what most people know about are coral reefs, which are actually alive.  A coral reef is a lot of calcium carbonate that is also made up of living creatures.  So, when you are thinking of a coral reef, you can think about it actually being alive!

A regular reef is formed a few different ways.  A common way is flooding of a land from the ocean.  The ocean may now contain some land that is cliff like which is called a reef.  A coral reef is created when when a small amount of dead coral dies and turns into calcium carbonate.  New coral is constantly being made and attaches to the dead reef.  This process is a long cycle. In clean and protected waters, reeFamous Reefs

One of the famous reefs of the world are the Great Barrier Reef of Australia.  It extends about 1300 miles and is filled with beauty.  Belize and the Cayman Islands also carry famous reefs.

Reef Definition

A reef is a a ridge of rocks and/or sand, often of with coral debris, at or near the surface of the water.

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