No diamond cannot form in basalt. Diamond only form in Kimberlite because it develop only at very low cooling rate.
No. Both basalt and rhyolite are formed from molten rock erupts from a volcano.
Yes. In that basalt is formed from rapid cooling of lava at or near the surface.
because they take longer to cool from the magma it is formed from
Sedimentary rocks
it cooled quick
Basalt is formed from relatively rapid cooling magma.
No. Granite and basalt have different compositions and form under different circumstances.
The Tango is written in 2/4 time. It is popular to count "slow, slow, quick, quick, slow" with the "slow" counting as one beat and the "quick" counting as a half of a beat.
No diamond cannot form in basalt. Diamond only form in Kimberlite because it develop only at very low cooling rate.
Tango has many different rhythms. American tango uses a simplified set rhythm in what is called the basic step: Slow, Slow, Quick, Quick Slow. There are various "advanced patterns" in American Tango that use different fixed rhythms, for example: Slow,Slow, Quick Quick --- Slow, Slow Quick, Quick Slow Slow, Slow Quick, Quick, Quick Slow Quick,Quick,Quick,Quick, Slow, Slow, Quick, Quick Slow Argentine tango is very flexible and has no set rhythm at all. The leader is free to improvise and dance any rhythm that fits the music. He can suddenly pause and hold a position for dramatic effect. Leader and follower need not even dance the same rhythm! Often the follower will be dancing all slows and the leader will do a double time step. In Argentine tango the leader may be stepping with the left foot while the follower also steps with the left foot. In American tango, this is usually considered incorrect unless the leader is dancing side-by-side (facing the same direction as the follower)
Quick, Quick, Slow.
No. Both basalt and rhyolite are formed from molten rock erupts from a volcano.
In American Foxtrot, there are two standard counts. The first on can be counted as such: Slow, slow, quick, quick. This will take six beats. The second timing is as such: Slow, quick quick. This will take four beats. Remember, every slow takes two beats, while every quick takes only one.
Quiet eruptions are a characteristic of basalt lava flows and plateaus.
slow
SLow