No, it's an igneous rock, made from cooling and consequently solidification of a magma. Animals (or any other organism) capable of leaving behind a fossil can not survive and do not live in a magma.
Fossils can be found in sedimentary rocks or in metamorphic rocks (if the protolith, the original rock, was sedimentary). In metamorphic rocks, fossils are generally intensely deformed and hence difficult to recognise/identify.
Yes. All rocks other than glassy volcanic rocks contain crystals.
No.
Gabbro is an igneous rock, it was once molten, much too hot for animals or plants to live in.
No. Gneiss is a high-grade metamorphic rock. Even if the gneiss formed from what was originally a fossil-containing rock, the metamorphism will have destroyed the fossils.
no because they have melted
yes because it is a sedimentary rock
i don't now
A gneiss is a metamorphic rock. Metamorphic rocks are created by the alteration of rocks by heat and pressure. Therefore, a gneiss may be created from an igneous rock in which case it would be called an orthogneiss.
Fossils would not likely be found in rock other than limestone, sandstone, and shale, or rock such as marble that has morphed from these sedimentary rocks. Fossils can basically be find in most Sedimentary rocks, but not in Igneous rocks because they are formed in volcanoes.
fossils found in tar
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Trace Fossils!
No, gneiss is a highly metamorphosed rock subjected to high pressured and heat. Although some gneisses were sediments before their alteration any traces of fossils would have been obliterated.
Gneiss is foliated.
Gneiss is hard.
A Gneiss is a Metamorphic rock
Gneiss Is a rock that is classified into metamorphic. Gneiss is considered rare by people but isnt to rare
Gneiss is a rock, not a mineral.
Gneiss is foliated and coarse grained
No, gneiss is metamorphic.
I am trying to find out what the other two types of rock besides gneiss form the Matterhorn. Gneiss is a metamorphic rock. That's a nice piece of gneiss!
Gneiss is a part of the earths lower crust. No matter where you drill you will eventually uncover gneiss.
Gneiss may come from either granite or schist.
Granite and Gneiss are both rocks.