Actually Iceland contains a very young rock landscape, with the oldest rocks dating back 14-16 million years ago. Some of the oldest rocks on earth are found in Greenland, dating back about 3.9 billion years.
Maybe you can or maybe not
No, Iceland is a young country, the oldest rocks there are only 20-30 million years old and since the dinosaurs became extinct about 65 million years ago, there is no possibility of any in Iceland.
The oldest paintings are prehistoric ones found in caves and on rocks. some researchers claim that Australian aborigines painted some rocks that can be seen today over 80 000 years ago
Devonian Period
Nope. The oldest rocks are located on continents, usually away from the ocean. The mid-ocean ridges are, in fact, home of some of the youngest rocks. The reason for this is what is called sea-floor spreading. Mid-ocean ridges form at places where oceanic plates diverge, or move apart. As this happens, magma rises from within the Earth to fill the gap. The magma cools and solidifies, creating new seafloor. This process continues as the plates continue to spread apart.
The worlds oldest fossils were found in an ancient beach in Austrila, they are 3.4 billion years old and are fossils of cells. They have no bones and are mineralized spheres.
yes it can be found in iceland ;]
The oldest rocks are found on land.
they are in Iceland and are 4 billion years old
the oldest rocks on earth can be found in Greenland. They ar epreserved because they are always covered with a thin laye of ice.
Iceland is mostly composed of Basalt, but all rocks are 'Basic' or 'Mafic' as the whole island is a volcano. Basalt is an Igneous rock.
The oldest rock's found on the moon are 4.0 billion years old.
Australia's oldest suburb is found in Sydney. It is the suburb of The Rocks.
Iceland
SURTSEY ROCKS AND MINERALSIgneous Rocks and Sedimentary RocksCalcite mineral and Halite Mineral
Some of the oldest rocks found in North America have been on the Canadian Shield.
ploterozoic,and paleozoic
No, Iceland is a young country, the oldest rocks there are only 20-30 million years old and since the dinosaurs became extinct about 65 million years ago, there is no possibility of any in Iceland.