igneous rock and/or limestone
Sand or gravel that naturally forms near earth surface is known as aggregate.
Igneous rock.
Sedimentary rock is rock that formed in the oceans after the sediment hardened. You will find such rock near bodies of water or places that used to be under water.
Sedimentary rocks form at the bottom of bodies of water, as more and more layers of sediment build up above them. Compared to the depths at which metamorphic rocks form, and some of the places igneous rocks form, these are indeed close to the Earth's surface.
Metamorphic rock is formed deep in the Earth's crust under tremendous heat and pressure. Fossiles are formed in sedimentary rock near the surface.
Sedimentary.
Sedimentary rocks are the type of rocks that can only form on or very near Earth's surface. Sedimentary rocks form from weathering processes that occur on Earth's surface.
Sand or gravel that naturally forms near earth surface is known as aggregate.
extrusive because it forms on or near earths surface
A sedimentary rock. Sedimentary rocks are made from sediments in rivers and streams.
SHUTUP
Any type of extrusive igneous rock. (i.e. basalt, rhyolite, andesite...) Also, some sedimentary rocks form at the surface by the precipitation of minerals when solutions cool or the water evaporates out of them. Examples include travertine, a calcite-rich rock that forms in hot mineral spring as the water cools, and various evaporites.
I think it is Magma
Igneous rock.
All sedimentary rocks form near the earth surface. E.g. Evaporites (notice the spelling here: "-ites"), limestone, dolostone, sandstone, silt and shale, etc. Most of these rocks have precipitated out of water solution. Also extrusive igneous rocks, as these form during volcano eruptions. E.g. Basalt.
Sedimentary rocks are formed on or near the Earth’s surface, in contrast to metamorphic and igneous rocks, which are formed deep within the Earth. The most important geological processes that lead to the creation of sedimentary rocks are erosion, weathering, dissolution, precipitation, and lithification.
no it is glaze