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Yes, even at the top of Mount Everest. The sediments that make up the rock containing the fossils started at the bottom of an ocean. In the case of the Himalayas, when India collided with Asia through the action of plate tectonics, the ocean sediments between the continents were uplifted and squeezed into the mountain belt we see today, taking the fossils with it.
Yes petrified fossils can form that way :)
uplifts would rise up the fossils that are buried deep underground.
Paleontologist-studys fossils of once living organisms Geologist-studys rocks Geochemist-studys the creation of rocks Volcanologist-studys volcanoes Entomologist-studys insects Biologist-studys living organisms Botany-study of plants Zoology-study of animals Bacteriology-study of bacteria Ecology-study of relationships among organism & their physical environments Histology-study of tissues which make up the body Mycology-study of fungi Morphology-a branch of biology that deals with the forms and structure of plants & animals Photochemistry-study of chemical changes involving light Physics-study of matter & energy
Marble
There is no passage to go from. It is difficult to make a conclusion without the passage being present.
There is no passage to go from. It is difficult to make a conclusion without the passage being present.
The rules of inference are syntactical transform rules that are used to make a conclusion from an idea to create an argument. The rules are used to make a valid, complete conclusion and never inferring a conclusion that is not valid. The set of rules must sound and complete, making sure that the rules listed are not redundant.
the scientist called biologist make som conclusion after a hypothesis and theory then they work on it
observe, make a hypothesis, experiment, conclusion, peer review, repeat
you need to go to the oreburg city mining museum. talk to the snooty scientist guy. but remember to put the fossils in your bag before doing it.
Feld admires Max.
If their data supported their hypothesis, then they would make a conclusion.
A minimum of 6 sets of data are needed to make a valid conclusion.
Look for the answer in your book. Its there.
A scientific hypothesis must be testable and falsifiable in order for it to be valid.
The Accuracy of the results.The Validity of the experiment (does it work as planned and actually reflect your question)The Repeatability. (if you - and especially others - cant repeat it then it is not valid conclusion)Possible Variables that would effect the result.