due to weathering, the earth's surface wears away, the sills and dykes form escarpments and batholith forms granite.
Granite is an intrusive igneous rock.
It is a coarse grained rock if its intrusive.
It is a coarse grained rock if its intrusive.
It is called an intrusive igneous rock.
I dont know but an intrusive rock is a type of igneos rock
Magma that hardens within the Earth's crust is called intrusive igneous rock. This type of rock forms when magma cools and solidifies beneath the Earth's surface, resulting in the formation of intrusive features like batholiths, dikes, and sills.
Intrusive features can be classified based on various characteristics such as their composition (rock, mineral, or fossil), size (small or large), shape (roundish or angular), and mode of formation (volcanic, tectonic, or sedimentary). These features may also be categorized according to their relationship with the surrounding rock or terrain, such as whether they cut across existing structures or postdate certain events.
The most basic divisions of intrusive igneous rock are granite, diorite, and gabbro.
Igneous rock that forms below the Earth's surface is intrusive.
intrusive rock froms when magma cools or hardens underneath the earth. :)
Extrusive. Solidifies above ground level.
Major intrusive features created by volcanoes include dikes (vertical sheets of magma that cut across pre-existing rock layers), sills (horizontal sheets of magma that intrude between rock layers), and plutons (large igneous bodies that crystallize deep underground). These intrusive features are a result of magma intruding into the Earth's crust and solidifying before reaching the surface.