The bottom is oldest. The top is newest. -From bottom to top is the equivalent of oldest to youngest in an undisturbed sequence.
Hawaii
Yes. It is the top of a mountain, or volcano.
Youngest at the top, oldest at the bottom, just as in nature.
The oldest is on bottom and youngest on top.
The layer at the bottom of the mountain is typically the oldest, as rocks are usually deposited in chronological order with the oldest rocks at the bottom and the youngest at the top. This principle is known as the law of superposition.
The oldest layers of sediments are typically found at the bottom of a sedimentary rock sequence, with the youngest layers at the top. Over time, new layers of sediments accumulate on top of older layers, creating a chronological sequence with the oldest layers at the bottom.
The top part of a wave is called the crest, while the bottom part is called the trough.
The top part of the leaf has more chlorophyll than the bottom.
The basic shape of a volcano is like that of a cone with it's bottom faced downwards towards the earth and the top pointy hole part facing upwards towards the sky! However there is a type of volcano which has a plain shape and that is a dead or an extinct volcano!Cone
True. In an undisturbed sequence of sedimentary rocks, the bottom layer is the oldest and the top layer is the youngest due to the principle of superposition, which states that in any undisturbed sequence of rock layers, the youngest rocks are at the top and the oldest are at the bottom.
The oldest rocks (layers) are at the bottom. The youngestrocks (layers) are at the top