Granite is an igneous rock where magma is trapped under the ground for so long that it creates rough grained crystals. On the other hand, Sandstone is formed when sediment with grains the size of sand grains becomes compacted underwater for a very long time.
If a sandstone in contact with a granite contains fragments of the granite, it suggests that the granite is older than the sandstone. The presence of granite fragments indicates that the granite was likely eroded and its material was transported and deposited to form the sandstone. This relationship can also imply that geological processes, such as weathering and erosion, played a significant role in shaping the landscape between the two rock types.
Granite becomes Sandstone when water erodes the Granite on Earths surface, and then deposits the sediment.
The sandstone is older because it must have been there first to provide the small pieces found in the granite. This relationship implies that the sandstone layer was already in place before the granite formed and incorporated fragments of the sandstone.
The granite would be older because it had to form first in order for the sandstone to contain pieces of it. The sandstone would have formed later on top of the granite layer.
None of those. Scoria, Pumice and Granite are igneous rocks. Sandstone is sedimentary.
granite
granite
granite
Granite is typically harder than sandstone. Granite is an igneous rock that forms from the cooling of molten magma, making it more dense and resistant to abrasion compared to sandstone, which is a sedimentary rock.
Granite particles are interlocked as the minerals formed from the slow cooling of molten material. Sandstone does not have the same interlocking crystal system, and voids between particles are generally larger.
Granite.
sandstone