No, not all the boys believe they have seen a beast near the pink granite. Some boys like Ralph and Simon are skeptical and doubt the existence of a beast, while others like Jack and the hunters firmly believe in its presence.
Simon's comment was about the beast. He suspected that the beast was not an animal and obviously didn't believe that it was a ghost. This left only one remaining possibility, that there was no beast. Simon believed that the beast was simply a product of the boy's own imaginations. The beast only existed in their own minds. However there was a deeper reasoning to Simon's comment. Simone suspected that the beast wasn't just a product of the boys' own imaginations but was actually the boys themselves. It was the boys themselves who were the 'beast,' capable of hurting, of killing and of committing acts of evil.
in a tree on the far side of the island.
Near dewford town
Piggy's suggestion, when the boys believe that the beast is preventing them from tending the signal fire on top of the mountain, is to simply build a new fire down on the beach near the platform. The idea is greeted with guarded enthusiasm.
yes, it's not flammable
Yosemite rock consists primarily of granite. Granite is formed through volcanic activity near the surface.
No. Granite cools from magma deep underground. Volcanic glass cools quickly at or near the surface.
the wild beast killed the women and felt her near the window with the beast half ear.
the hiker near the entrance of granite cave
Chapter six, Beast From Air, opens on the mountain top with Samneric tending the signal fire. It then relocates to the shelters near the beach before progressing to the platform where Ralph calls a meeting. The chapter ends at Castle Rock.
its near dewford on route 106 right above dewford
Granite and gabbro both contain large crystals, but gabbro typically has larger crystals due to its slower cooling rate beneath the Earth's surface compared to granite which cools at or near the surface.