Things You'll Need
Instructions
Vinegar
Place the rock in a dish.
Pour some vinegar on it. If the rock is part of a rock formation, use an eyedropper to apply some vinegar to it.
Watch to see if the vinegar fizzles. If the rock is a limestone rock, you will see bubbles where you applied the vinegar and hear popping sounds. Mineralized water, similar to vinegar, dissolves limestone. This is how caves form. Mineralized water, over thousands of years, poured through limestone deposits, widening pore spaces until the spaces widened into caves.
Scratch
Obtain an implement made of steel, such as a knife or coin.
Scratch the rock with the implement.
Observe the scratch. If the scratch leaves an imprint, it is likely the rock is limestone. Many fossils embed in limestone because the limestone's soft texture allows easy accumulation of animal or plant debris, which forms a fossil.
Hydrochloric Acid
Add 120 ml of 20 percent hydrochloric acid to 800 ml of tap water. Ensure you add the hydrochloric acid to the tap water and not the other way around.
Drip some of the solution on the rock.
Observe the rock. If you see fizzles and bubbles, the rock is likely limestone.