It is metamorphic rock
an intrusive
Rhyolite cools faster from magma (lava) than does granite, which forms from slow cooling of magma deep underground. Granite.
Igneous rock can form deep below the surface as intrusive igneous rock, or on or near the surface as extrusive igneous rock. X Answer is: Igneous
Fossils are primarily found in sedementary rocks. Granite is an intrusive igneous rock, meaning that it forms when molten rock hardens deep underground. Nothing lives at those depths or can survive those temperatures.
It is metamorphic rock
They are not volcanoes. The Yosemite granite domes are plutons, formed from molten rock that cooled deep underground.
an intrusive
Rhyolite cools faster from magma (lava) than does granite, which forms from slow cooling of magma deep underground. Granite.
Igneous rock can form deep below the surface as intrusive igneous rock, or on or near the surface as extrusive igneous rock. X Answer is: Igneous
No. It does have igneous rock (granite) which was formed deep underground from magma, but this was never volcanic rock.
Granite
Fossils are primarily found in sedementary rocks. Granite is an intrusive igneous rock, meaning that it forms when molten rock hardens deep underground. Nothing lives at those depths or can survive those temperatures.
Granite is an igneous rock, which means it is formed from cooling and solidification of molten magma deep within the Earth's crust. It is composed mainly of quartz, feldspar, and mica minerals.
Yes, granite is a type of igneous rock.
Granite is not a soft rock.
No, it's not a sedimentary rock, it is an igneous rock. :)