Granite is an intrusive igneous rock which means it was formed in place during the cooling of molten rock.
Is granite a sedimentary rock.
But there has been a famous debate over the years because extreme metamorphosis of crustal sediments can produce melts of rocks that are also granite.
It is the most abundant basement rock that underlies the relatively thin sedimentary veneer of the continents.
Granite is not the kind of rock that would form into sandstone.
A rock with a similar composition and appearance as granite gneiss can form through long and intense metamorphism of sedimentary paragneiss or igneous rocks orthogneiss.
Granite containing rock is widely distributed throughout the continental crust.
In general terms granite is an igneous rock.
Sandstone is a sedimentary rock that is worn away by dirt and dust rubbing against it in the wind.
Gneiss however is distinguished from granite by its strong fabric and alternating dark and light colored bands.
Formally granite is a plutonic rock that is composed of between 10 to 50 quartz typically semi transparent white and 65 to 90 total feldspar typically a pinkish or white hue.
Much of it was intruded during the precambrian age.
Generally the slower the molten rock cooled the larger.
Outcrops of granite tend to form tors domes or bornhardts and rounded massifs.