You can. It depends on the climate the volcano is located in, the height of the volcano, and the time of year.
Mount Rainer in the United States in America.
No. It means that there is no known activity in the volcano from what volcanoligists can find out.
Generally, yes. When a volcano is dormant the temperatures are generally no different from what you would find on a non-volcanic mountain. One exception would be the occasional hot spring or fumarole venting hot gas.
yes, if you live near a dormant or extinct volcano. the easiest place to find it otherwise is on the beach.
You find them on the side of a volcano.
Well, I found some in my backyard. If you go somewhere near a dormant volcano maybe you might find some.
Whether a volcano should erupt or not depends on the pressure building up in the mantle underneath. In some areas, the solid cap formed over a dormant volcano is sufficient to prevent a new eruption. In this case, the pressure could move away to find a weaker area and a new eruption and the birth of a new volcano could appear.
You would find extrusive igneous rocks. Beyond that it depends on the volcano.
at the top
you would find it in various different places on the volcano. there are also various different types of igneous rock, that there is on the volcano. like my answer? you don't have to use it but it would be good if you did
You would expect to find lava solidifying into basalt on the flanks of a volcano, most likely a shield volcano.
You could find obsidian near a volcano.