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no, because the extreme heat that metamorphic rocks must undergo to form would have burned the dinosaur fossil, or any fossil!
No. When a rock is metamorphosed it normally removes all traces of fossils. Schist in particular has been under great pressure, enough to change the minerals in the original rock.
NO, a metamorphic rock is a new rock formed when existing rockes are spueezed or heated. If you were to find a dinosaur bone in a rock it would be a sedimentary rock, which is a rock formed by layers of sediment, Which means a dinousar bone could of been on top of a layer of sediment and another layer of sediment went on top of that, formed a rock that had a dinosaur bone in it.
You WOULD expect to find metamorphic rocks in the recesses (deep layers) of the Earth's crust. But not in the mantle or core. Metamorphic means changed - and rocks - either sedimentary or igneous - get changed by the heat and pressures found in the deep crust.
Bryce Canyon
I don't believe he wanted to find the grand canyon. He didn't expect to find it but he did anyway.
You would expect to find igneous or metamorphic rocks, depending on the depth.
If the rock melts the resulting rock type would be igneous rather than metamorphic.
A deep sea fan
plate boundary
the plants you should expet are one that can stay in very hot temperatures like catus.
because igneous' constant heat would melt it and water used to make sedimentary would break it with pressure or erode it