Not from the magma, no. Cooled and solidified magma is classified as igneous. However, metamorphic rocks can be formed as the heat and hot fluids of intruding magma affect the properties and possibly the chemistry of the existing "country rock" into which it comes in contact. This process is called contact metamorphism.
Granite is formed from cooling magma.
Granite is an igneous rock.
Magma!
The rate of cooling of the magma determines the type of mineral formed by the magma or lava..
lava
Igneous rocks are formed from the cooling and solidifying of magma. The resulting rock can be instrusive (magma cooling within the crust) and extrusive (lava cooling on the surface). The most common kind of rocks are Granite (intrusive) and Basalt (extrusive).
If a rock is intrusive, that means that it formed from magma inside the Earth. An example is granite. The opposite is extrusive, which forms from cooling lava from volcanoes. An extrusive rock is obsidian.
Igneous rock forms from the cooling of molten material called magma or lava.
The type of rock formed by cooling of Magma or Lava is Igneous
The rate of cooling of the magma determines the type of mineral formed by the magma or lava..
Igneous rock is formed from the cooling and solidification of magma or lava.
Igneous rocks are formed from the cooling and solidification of magma or lava.
Granite is formed from magma, not lava. And, no, they are not the same thing. Magma is inside of the Earth, but lava is what you get after the magma reaches Earth's surface and gasses within it expand when the pressure is deduced.
igneous rock
lava
Igneous rocks are formed by lava or magma cooling
The rock that formed from lava would have smaller crystals than the rock that formed from magma.
it is lava and when lava cools it forms igneous rock
Rhyolite cools faster from magma (lava) than does granite, which forms from slow cooling of magma deep underground. Granite.
They are formed from the cooling and solidification of lava or magma at or near the surface of the Earth.