That is not directly possible.
First, the lava would have to cool forming a 'lava' type rock. The type depends on the contents of the magma.
Next, the rock would need to be eroded by wind and/or water. This process takes thousands to millions of years depending on the rock.
Finally, the silt created by erosion would need to find its way to the bottom of a very deep body of water where it can be compressed into sedimentary rock.
Extreme heat.
Igneous rock becomes sediment due to exposure to chemical and mechanical weathering at or near the surface.
Melting is the process in the rock cycle that causes magma to form.
Volcanoes tend to form where plates collide. They are the mechanisms by which magma reaches the surface of the Earth; magma may also flow to Earth's surface between the moving plates at a divergent boundary. Called lava on Earth's surface, it cools and forms igneous rock. Igneous rock is a type of rock in the rock cycle. Through weathering, igneous rocks can become sediment, which eventually can become sedimentary rock. This sedimentary rock, or the original igneous rock, can also become metamorphic rock when exposed to heat and pressure beneath Earth's surface. Metamorphic rocks in turn melt and become magma. This magma plus additional magma from theEarth's interior begin the cycle again.
The sedimentary rock melts,which causes magma. When the magma cools it becomes an igneous rock.
Igneous rock is formed from the cooling and solidification of magma or lava.
The sedimentary rock melts,which causes magma. When the magma cools it becomes an igneous rock.
Igneous rock becomes sediment due to exposure to chemical and mechanical weathering at or near the surface.
It must weather and erode, forming sediment that can eventually lithify into sedimentary rock.
Melting is the process in the rock cycle that causes magma to form.
Well, first before the sediment can become to a metamorphic rock, it has to create into a sedimentary rock or an igneous rock, Then the rocks go under the ground and is under tons and tons of pressure, which fosters heat build up, and this causes them to change.
It gets weathered into sediment or it could be subjected to heat and pressure and become a metamorphic rock, or it could melt into magma and cool into an igneous rock.
No. Sedimentary rock forms when broken bits of rock get compressed and cemented together. Igneous or "magma" rock forms when molten rock cools and solidifies, essentially freezing.
It will be in a volcanic or sediment rock.
Well, first before the sediment can become to a metamorphic rock, it has to create into a sedimentary rock or an igneous rock, Then the rocks go under the ground and is under tons and tons of pressure, which fosters heat build up, and this causes them to change.
Volcanoes tend to form where plates collide. They are the mechanisms by which magma reaches the surface of the Earth; magma may also flow to Earth's surface between the moving plates at a divergent boundary. Called lava on Earth's surface, it cools and forms igneous rock. Igneous rock is a type of rock in the rock cycle. Through weathering, igneous rocks can become sediment, which eventually can become sedimentary rock. This sedimentary rock, or the original igneous rock, can also become metamorphic rock when exposed to heat and pressure beneath Earth's surface. Metamorphic rocks in turn melt and become magma. This magma plus additional magma from theEarth's interior begin the cycle again.
The sedimentary rock melts,which causes magma. When the magma cools it becomes an igneous rock.
Igneous rocks are formed when magma or lava cools and hardens. These rocks can either be weathered/broken down into smaller pieces to become sediment or they can be subjected to heat and pressure causing them to either melt or become metamorphic rocks. If the sediments become cemented together then the rock is a sedimentary rock.