anywhere within 10 miles of an erupted valcano
'You can go to Google maps and type in ash-fall fossil beds state historical park. It will come up with a map of it!'
yes
In dry lake beds. Also known as soda ash.
I got this: "Unlike most fossil deposits, which consist of scattered bones accumulated over extended periods of time, the ash bed contains mostly articulated remains with bones still joined together in the proper order." From here: http://www-museum.unl.edu/research/vertpaleo/ashfall.html
No. An ash fall is not a volcano; it is a product of some volcanic erputions.
Kingston Fossil Plant coal fly ash slurry spill happened in 2008.
An ash fall is a rain of airborne ash resulting from a volcanic eruption.
The ashfall beds were caused when a volcano erupted and covered the landscape with ashes. This caused a massive number of animals to die because they inhaled the ash and it coated their respiratory system and suffocated them. Then, the ashes covered their bodies and protected them from being scattered and decomposing over the millions of years.
The most infrequent date for ash Wednesday to fall on is the twenty ninth of february
if dinosaurs died because of ash fall than all the dinosaurs died because of that
the ash affects the engines makin them fall
it preserves them.