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It's igneous rock!
Yes, if a batholith it will have an accompanying metamorphic aureole, with both exposed by erosion.
Yes, its eventual fate is weathering to a regolith that may form a new sedimentary rock in the future, but ...
If it's igneous rock it is not sedimentary or metamorphic.
It could be on the surface by extrusion (volcanic) or by erosion revealing a batholith, but either way it's igneous.
Extrusive Igneous Rock
Komatite/picrite (ultramafic)
Basalt (mafic, mainly seen in oceanic crust)
Andesite (intermediate)
Rhyolite (Silicic/felsic)
Also are called Extrusive.
Extrusive igneous rocks.
Extrusive
Igneous
The term that refers to rocks produced when melted rock or magma from inside Earth cools or hardens on or below Earth's surface is "igneous rocks." Igneous rocks are formed through the solidification of molten material, either on the surface (extrusive igneous rocks) or beneath the surface (intrusive igneous rocks). Examples of igneous rocks include basalt, granite, and obsidian.
Igneous rock. Extrusive igneous rock forms at or near the surface, intrusive igneous rock forms below the surface.
Igneous rocks are formed when molten hot rock flows to the surface of the Earth and rapidly cools down. The crystals that form are rich in silicon and oxygen.
Are generically called lavas but may be specifically basalts, ignimbrites, andesites phonolites etc.
it forms to a mineral
when it cools undera lot of pressure underground it is an intrusive igneous. If it cools on the surface of the earth then it is an extrusive igneous.
lava
The term that refers to rocks produced when melted rock or magma from inside Earth cools or hardens on or below Earth's surface is "igneous rocks." Igneous rocks are formed through the solidification of molten material, either on the surface (extrusive igneous rocks) or beneath the surface (intrusive igneous rocks). Examples of igneous rocks include basalt, granite, and obsidian.
Igneous Rock
Igneous rock. Extrusive igneous rock forms at or near the surface, intrusive igneous rock forms below the surface.
They are called intrusive igneous rocks.
Yes, once-molten rock that cooled on the surface had been extruded from the earth. That is why it is classified as extrusive igneous rock.
Yes, once-molten rock that cooled on the surface had been extruded from the earth. That is why it is classified as extrusive igneous rock.
igneous intrusive
It forms an igneous rock. If it is within the Earth, then it is an intrusive igneous rock (e.g. granite) and if it is erupted onto Earth's surface then it is an extrusive igneous rock (e.g. basalt).
Intrusive rock. The prefix in-helps to remember that it is made inside the earth.
no sometimes it cools under earth's surface. that is called intrusive igneous rocks. when it reaches earth's surface and cools its called extrusive igneous rocks.