Coal deposits that experienced melt due to contact with a magmatic intrusion would become part of the melt mix and would become a part of a body of solidified magma that is either intrusive or extrusive, the exact rock would depend on this and the chemistry of the solidified mineralized mix.
Probably a felsic igneous rock.
Cooling and solidifying magma turns into igneous rock.
Metamorphic rock becomes igneous rock when it is melted, then solidifies.
An igneous rock is formed when magma rises through the earth's crust and cools.
No, lignite is not an igneous rock. Lignite is a type of coal formed from compressed peat. Igneous rocks are formed through the solidification of molten magma or lava.
because when it melts it turns in to magma
if the igneous rock is put under heat and pressure it turns into a metamorphic
Coal is not a intrusive igneous rock but is instead a form of Carbon. The carbon is heated and pressured from low grade metamorphism. Coal is formed mostly from marshes or swamps millions of years ago, think of an environment like the everglades in Florida. A igneous rock would be something like a gabbro or granite.
It turns into igneous rock.
coal
When a rock melts, it turns into magma, so when the magma cools, it can make a new igneous rock.
Igneous rock Explanation:because when it comes out a volcano it turns to lava and when it hardens then it will form an extrusive igneous rock specifically