No. Metamorphic rocks can also from front sedimentary rocks and from other metamorphic rocks.
Metamorphic rocks. With proper heat and pressure sedimentary and igneous rocks can form metamorphic rocks.
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no any type of rock can become any other or another form of itself.
Metamorphic rocks can form from any type of rock, including sedimentary and igneous rocks. The key factor is that existing rocks undergo changes in texture, mineralogy, or chemical composition due to heat, pressure, or chemically active fluids.
No, metamorphic can be formed by either igneous or sedimetary rock.
no, the process only happens to igneous rocks
No. Only extrusive igneous rocks are volcanic.
Metamorphic rocks can be formed from any pre-existing rock type (igneous, sedimentary, or other metamorphic rocks) that undergoes intense heat, pressure, or chemical changes without melting. This process causes the minerals in the rock to recrystallize and reorganize, resulting in a new metamorphic rock with different properties.
The metamorphic processes of heat and pressure can alter the parent rock (sedimentary, igneous, metamorphic) chemically or structurally into a form of rock that can only be created under certain conditions. Metamorphic rocks are not created from sedimentation and lithification or from molten material.
there are several ways such as heat & pressure, melting, chemical weathering, compression, compaction & cementation, but it depends on the kind of rock it is for what process it has to go through. -Cutegirl99
Neither. The terms intrusive and extrusive apply to igneous rocks; marble is metamorphic.
No only igneous and sedimentary rocks