By crystalization!
B***H
Yes, granite is formed from cooling magma.
Rhyolite cools faster from magma (lava) than does granite, which forms from slow cooling of magma deep underground. Granite.
No. Granite forms from magma, which is liquid rock. There are gasses trapped in the magma, but they only make up a small portion of it.
Granite is the result of hardened magma. It forms when volcanos erupt, leaving magma on or near the surface of the earth.
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.
By crystalization! B***H
Yes, granite is formed from cooling magma.
Yes, granite is formed from cooling magma.
the granite is made out of magma
Both originate as molten magma but in the case of granite the magma is acidic and in the case of basalt the magma is basic.
magma
Yes. Granite forms when silica-rich magma cools underground.
Granite is an igneous rock.
Yes
Granite is formed when magma that is under the surface of the Earth slowly crystallizes. Granite is usually composed of feldspar, quartz, amphiboles, and mica.
Rhyolite cools faster from magma (lava) than does granite, which forms from slow cooling of magma deep underground. Granite.
Granite is the result of hardened magma. It forms when volcanos erupt, leaving magma on or near the surface of the earth.