Yes, in my experience. Warts form in the epithelium, and are usually covered by a layer of dead skin cells. I guess they hijack a blood supply from lower layers of the dermis, because black dots on the surface of the wart are blood vessels (the epithelium doesn't normally have blood vessels).
For clarity, the wart is skin. Veruccas are flat because you walk on them; otherwise they are identical to warts on your hands, which do project past the surrounding skin.
Thanks for responding! Maybe I have had a verruca on my thumb, then: for many years I had a dark bump on the pad of my thumb, which was painful to touch, and then it appeared to 'sink' into the skin. I don't suppose there is any reason why one's (healthy) skin cells wouldn't cover over the wart given an opportunity, and maybe the continual pressure on my thumb gave it just that.
>I don't suppose there is any reason why one's (healthy) skin cells wouldn't cover over the wart given an opportunity, and maybe the continual pressure on my thumb gave it just that.
I suspect what you were seeing was not it sinking in, but reducing in diameter, as your immune system consumed viral cells. Imagine the cross section of a cone decreasing as it is pushed out of a surface.
1. Veruccas are warts on the soles of the feet. If it's on your hand, it's a wart.
2. Warts are normally skin-coloured, or greyish, or yellowish.
See a doctor.
[Edit] I think some people refer to some kinds of mole as a "wart". If your lesion is dark, then maybe it's no kind of wart at all, but a mole, i.e. a melanoma.
For clarity, the wart is skin. Veruccas are flat because you walk on them; otherwise they are identical to warts on your hands, which do project past the surrounding skin.