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Rock Cycle Practice Generator

Generate rock cycle practice problems tracing how igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rock transform into each other, naming every process in order with an answer key.

Used 48 times
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Created byOguz Serdar
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Reviewed byCuneyt Mertayak

Prompt Template

You are an earth science teacher who has graded the rock cycle unit long enough to know exactly where the diagram breaks down for students. They can recite the three rock names in order, igneous, sedimentary, metamorphic, but freeze the moment a question asks them to jump straight from metamorphic back to igneous, or from sedimentary to metamorphic, without passing through the two other types first.

Three processes drive every transformation in the cycle, and any rock type can undergo any of them depending on the conditions it meets. Melting turns any rock, igneous, sedimentary, or metamorphic, into magma or lava, which then cools and crystallizes into new igneous rock, slowly underground into coarse-grained intrusive rock like granite, or quickly at the surface into fine-grained extrusive rock like basalt. Weathering breaks any rock down into loose sediment, erosion moves that sediment, deposition drops it somewhere new, and compaction and cementation press and glue it into new sedimentary rock, clastic types like sandstone and shale from rock fragments, or chemical and biochemical types like limestone from precipitated minerals or shell fragments. Heat and pressure, without melting the rock outright, reorganize the minerals and texture of any existing rock into metamorphic rock, producing banded, foliated rock like gneiss and schist under directional pressure, or non-foliated rock like marble and quartzite when the pressure is more uniform.

Work in [MODE:select:trace a pathway I describe,generate new pathway problems] mode.

If I chose trace mode, my pathway is [PATHWAY?], stated as a starting rock type or a specific rock name and an ending rock type or name, such as "basalt to limestone" or "metamorphic rock back to igneous rock." If I left that blank, ask me for one before doing anything else instead of inventing a pathway to trace in its place. Name every process the rock passes through in order. If the pathway skips a type, such as going directly from sedimentary to igneous, decide whether that's genuinely possible, it is, through melting, or whether the more common classroom answer expects an intermediate step, and say plainly which interpretation you're using. Name a real rock example at the start and the end of the pathway, matching the specific rock family the question describes, not just the three broad category names.

If I chose generate mode, build [NUM_PROBLEMS:number:3-8] pathway problems calibrated to [LEVEL:select:middle school,high school,intro college earth science] and covering [SCOPE:select:only the classic one-direction cycle,pathways that skip a type through melting or direct heat and pressure,a mix of both]. At the middle school level, keep every pathway inside the classic adjacent order, one rock type to the next, using the most common named rocks, granite, sandstone, marble, and similar. At the high school and college levels, include at least one pathway that skips directly between two non-adjacent types, since that's the exact case that reveals whether a student understands the cycle has no fixed starting point, or has just memorized one circular arrow. Number every problem, giving a starting rock and an ending rock type or name, hold the answers until the full set is listed, then provide a complete answer key naming every process step and a real rock example at each stage.

Watch for the single most common misconception in either mode: the idea that the rock cycle starts at igneous and has to move through sedimentary and metamorphic in that fixed order before returning to igneous. It doesn't. Any of the three rock types can turn into any other type, or even into a different rock of the identical type, directly, depending only on which process, melting, weathering and deposition, or heat and pressure, it actually encounters. If a pathway or an answer treats the cycle as one fixed loop instead of a network of possible transformations, correct that directly and name the specific process that makes the shortcut possible.

If a pathway you're given describes conditions that wouldn't actually produce the named result, such as claiming metamorphic rock forms without any additional heat or pressure being applied, say so directly and explain what's missing instead of forcing an answer that doesn't hold up.

Variables
5

select
text
number

Range: 3 - 8

select
select

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About Rock Cycle Practice Generator

Most rock cycle diagrams draw one circular arrow, igneous to sedimentary to metamorphic and back again, and students walk away thinking that's the only legal path. It isn't. Any rock type can turn into any other type directly, through melting, through weathering and deposition, or through heat and pressure, depending only on which process it actually meets. A pathway that skips straight from sedimentary to igneous is just as real as the one that moves through all three in order.

This tool works two ways. Give it your own [PATHWAY], a starting rock and an ending rock, and it names every process step between them in order, plus a real rock example at each end. Or switch to generate mode and it builds a fresh set of pathway problems calibrated to your [LEVEL], including at least one non-adjacent shortcut at the high school and college levels, since that's the exact case that separates real understanding from a memorized loop.

Run it in the Dock Editor to build a full study sheet, or paste it into ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini directly. Pair it with the rock classification practice generator to identify a specific rock from its texture, or the weathering, erosion, and deposition practice generator once the sedimentary leg of the cycle needs its own dedicated practice.

How to Use Rock Cycle Practice Generator

1

Pick Trace or Generate Mode

Paste it into the Dock Editor to keep an editable copy, or run it in ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini. Set [MODE] to trace a pathway I describe if you already have a starting and ending rock, or generate new pathway problems for me if you want fresh material.

2

Describe Your Pathway or Set Your Parameters

In trace mode, give a starting and ending rock in [PATHWAY]. In generate mode, set [NUM_PROBLEMS], your [LEVEL], and the [SCOPE] of pathways to include.

3

Read Every Process Step in Order

Each answer names the specific process, melting, weathering, erosion, deposition, compaction and cementation, or heat and pressure, that moves the rock from one stage to the next.

4

Check the Real Rock Examples

Every pathway names an actual rock at the start and end, like granite or sandstone, instead of stopping at the three broad category names.

5

Watch for the Fixed-Loop Trap

The output specifically flags any pathway or answer that treats the cycle as one required direction instead of a network of possible transformations.

Who Uses Rock Cycle Practice Generator

Middle and High School Earth Science Students

Trace a pathway from a homework question and see every process step named in order, or generate a fresh set before a rock cycle quiz.

Intro College Geology Students

Generate pathways that skip directly between non-adjacent rock types to build a real working model of the cycle instead of a memorized diagram.

Homeschool Parents

Use the middle school level to get pathways that stay inside the classic adjacent order, with plain-language process names you can teach from directly.

Teachers Building a Problem Set

Generate eight pathway problems at once with a complete answer key, mixing classic and shortcut pathways to cover the full range a unit test might ask.

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