anywhere within 10 miles of an erupted valcano
Yes, Pompeii is an example of an ash fall fossil bed, where volcanic ash and debris buried the city and its inhabitants in AD 79 during the eruption of Mount Vesuvius. The ash preserved the city with remarkable detail, including buildings, artifacts, and even human remains, providing valuable insights into ancient Roman life.
No, an ash fall is not a volcano. An ash fall occurs when volcanic ash and debris are ejected from a volcano during an eruption and then carried by winds to surrounding areas, causing the ash to fall to the ground.
yes because fossils can be buried in ash and rocks around volcanos
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.
diaper ash
if dinosaurs died because of ash fall than all the dinosaurs died because of that
The most infrequent date for ash Wednesday to fall on is the twenty ninth of february
the ash affects the engines makin them fall
it preserves them.
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