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Formation

Formation is the act or result of forming; the process by which something comes into being, is arranged, or takes shape. The term derives from the Latin formare, to form. In general use, formation refers to structure, pattern, or the way parts are combined.

In geology, a formation is a mappable body of rock with distinctive characteristics that distinguish it from

In biology and developmental sciences, formation describes the development of tissues, organs, or organisms. Morphogenesis is

In astronomy, star formation occurs in molecular clouds when gravity causes gas and dust to coalesce, forming

In chemistry and materials science, formation denotes the creation of a chemical compound or solid phase, often

In social, military, and organizational contexts, formation refers to the arrangement of people or units for

neighboring
rocks.
Formations
are
named
for
geographic
locality
and
are
used
in
stratigraphy
to
organize
the
sequence
of
rocks.
A
formation
may
contain
multiple
lithologies
and
can
be
subdivided
into
units
called
members
or
beds.
the
set
of
processes
that
shape
form
during
embryonic
development,
while
tissue
formation
and
organ
formation
refer
to
the
differentiation
and
assembly
of
cells
into
functional
structures.
protostars
and
eventually
mature
stars.
The
term
can
also
apply
to
planet
formation
in
protoplanetary
disks.
described
by
formation
energy
or
formation
enthalpy,
which
quantify
the
energy
change
during
synthesis.
a
purpose,
such
as
a
company’s
legal
formation,
or
a
military
formation
like
a
line,
column,
or
square.