You can find rocks that are sedimentary rocks which are found in mountains, rivers and near the seashores.
As sedimentary rock is deposited at over time, you can find fossils in it.
Not necessarily. While nearly all fossils, including seashells, are found in sedimentary rock, most sedimentary rock does not contain fossils. Even then, those fossils will not necessarily be seashells. If you do find a rock with seashells, though, you can be pretty much guaranteed that it is sedimentary.
If you mean an intrusion via magma/lava, then fossils would not exist due to the fact that most fossils are found in SEDIMENTARY rock, not IGNEOUS (magma/lava rocks).
No. Dinosaurs did not appear until aout 230 million years ago. You could, however, still find fossils of other animals.
Fossils are nearly always found in some type of sedimentary rock. Limestone is a sedimentary rock which very commonly contains fossils, as is coal.
Quartz is a mineral not a rock. Fossils can be found associated with quartz in sedimentary rock not inside the quartz.
Yes.
You would most likely find fossils in sedimentary rock. Sedimentary rocks are formed from layers of sediment that accumulate over time, which can help preserve fossils in the rock.
Sedimentary rock is where we look for fossils.
You use rock smash and can sometimes find fossils.
Fossils are found in sedimentary rock because it is layers of sand, rock, and sediments, and the bones fall between the layers where the form into fossil's.
Fossils are most likely to be found in sedimentary rock.
Igneous rock
You can but it very very rare. you are more likely to find them in sedimentary rocks.
Fossils are formed in sedimentary rock because the rock is formed at temperatures that do not destroy the fossils like the igneous rocks would.
You are most likely to find fossils in sedimentary rock.
Sedimentary rock