Yes it is extrusive love yall
no
Extrusive
Andesite is considered an extrusive igneous rock.
Basalt and rhyolite are examples of extrusive igneous rocks. Also, pumice, scoria, obsidian, tuff, ignimbrite,....
Dacite is extrusive. Its intrusive equivalent is granodiorite.
Obsidian
intrusive
it is A instrsive! lol
Andesite is considered an extrusive igneous rock.
Obsidian is intrusive because it was cooled below the ground.
If a rock is intrusive, that means that it formed from magma inside the Earth. An example is granite. The opposite is extrusive, which forms from cooling lava from volcanoes. An extrusive rock is obsidian.
Basalt and obsidian are extrusive igneous rocks. Gabbro is an intrusive igneous rock.
Basalt and rhyolite are examples of extrusive igneous rocks. Also, pumice, scoria, obsidian, tuff, ignimbrite,....
quartz itself, but you will find fragments of quartz of all sizes in both sedimentary and metamorphic rocks.
No. Obsidian is volcanic glass. Glass is amorphous and thus noncrystalline.
Dacite is extrusive. Its intrusive equivalent is granodiorite.
Extrusive. Solidifies above ground level.
Diorite is an intrusive igneous rock. Its extrusive equivalent is andesite.
Granite and basalt are the most common types of igneous rock. Igneous rock types, or classifications, also include those that are intrusive and extrusive. Intrusive igneous rock is formed from the solidification of slow cooling magma below the surface. Extrusive igneous rock is formed for the solidification of rapidly cooling lava at or near the surface.