There are granite deposits from billions of years ago (which are much older than the oldest dinosaur), there are other granite deposits which were formed in the Cenozoic Period (after all of the dinosaurs were extinct), and there are also granite deposits from the Mesozoic Period (when dinosaurs were dominant). So the answer is: It can be, but is not necessarily so.
yes, the coelacanth is older than the dinosaurs.
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When a granite intrusion occurs within a layer of younger limestone, the granite is considered older than the surrounding limestone. This is because intrusive rocks form before surrounding sedimentary rocks. If the intrusion occurs within older limestone, then the limestone is considered older than the granite.
Granite is typically older than limestone. Granite is formed from molten magma deep within the Earth's crust, while limestone is formed from the accumulation of marine organisms over time. Therefore, granite is usually older as it predates the formation of limestone.
older than the dinosaurs
older
Granite is typically older than rhyolite. Granite is an intrusive igneous rock that forms underground from the slow cooling of magma, while rhyolite is an extrusive igneous rock that forms on the surface from the rapid cooling of lava. Therefore, granite generally predates rhyolite in terms of when it was formed.
No. The first mammals appeared shortly after the first dinosaurs.
granite is older, Granite goes back more than 300 mya to the Ancestral Rockies or the first Rocky Mountains-Fountain Formation
Axolotls are not dinosaurs. Axolotls belong to a group of animals that's older than dinosaurs.
Fossils of sharks have been found dating back to the Silurian period, more than 200 million years before the first dinosaurs.
no there not