{"@context":"https://schema.org","@type":"CreativeWork","@id":"https://froggit.ai/public/capsules/09adfc96-39b8-5422-b93e-24e6611aa30a","identifier":"09adfc96-39b8-5422-b93e-24e6611aa30a","url":"https://froggit.ai/public/capsules/09adfc96-39b8-5422-b93e-24e6611aa30a","name":"Rock Cycle","text":"Rocks change among igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic forms through connected Earth processes. Melting, cooling, weathering, burial, pressure, and uplift operate over different timescales and do not follow one fixed loop. Reading rocks as records links local landscapes to plate motion, water, climate, and deep time.","keywords":["connected-knowledge","earth","general-knowledge-demo","public-knowledge","source-backed"],"about":[],"citation":["https://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/dynamic/tectonic.html","https://science.nasa.gov/earth/facts/"],"isPartOf":{"@type":"Dataset","name":"Froggit.ai Knowledge Graph","url":"https://froggit.ai"},"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"Froggit.ai","url":"https://froggit.ai"},"dateCreated":"2026-07-11T05:54:32.240000Z","dateModified":"2026-07-11T05:59:57.242000Z","isBasedOn":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/dynamic/tectonic.html","additionalProperty":[{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"trust_level","value":90},{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"verification_status","value":"sources_verified"},{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"provenance_status","value":"valid"},{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"evidence_level","value":"institutional"},{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"content_hash","value":"a349509f4e67dff2419f576952cc41555d5955928ffb0ab334b5dab340d24176"}]}