Is at the bottom of course! Since sedimentary rock is formed when layers build up and then harden. So the younger would be at the top.!
According to the principle of superposition, it would be the uppermost layers that are the youngest, and therefore would have the most modern fossils.
The layer that is closest to the surface would have the youngest fossils.
Igneous rock
Cause they are helpful
BedRock
I am guessing that the most likely place to find a gondola would be either somewhere in Canada
Superposition is the methodology of younger sediments being deposited over older rocks. Paleontologists can determine the evolution or extinction of a species by looking at what fossils are either present or absent in a particular sedimentary layer.
You can find it in coata Rica
You should handle a fossil with care because they are very old and delicate.
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A fossil would most likely be found in sedimentary rocks
in your bed
MOSQUITOS
Sedimentary.
A geologist is studying layers of rock He finds a fossil with an imprint of a shelled animal According to the law of faunal and floral succession what kind of fossil would he most likely find next is a fossil of fishes.
in a cave
yes because fossils can be buried in ash and rocks around volcanos
If you find a seashell fossil in a rock layer on a mountain, than you know that the rock layer was formed at a time when that area was submerged under water. This is because the seashell lived and died underwater, so it would have been fossilized there as the rock layer formed. Millions of years later, the water drained away, and forces within the Earth's crust pushed the rock layer and the layers above it upward, forming mountains. Of course, the rock layer would have been buried deep within the Earth by that point, but as the mountains formed, weathering and erosion would have worn away the newer layers, exposing the ancient rock layer with the seashell.
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sedimentary rock
A geologist is studying layers of rock. He finds a fossil with an imprint of a shelled animal. According to the law of faunal and floral succession, what kind of fossil would he most likely find next, in the layer of rock above it? Look back to the Fossil Succession Chart for help.
underground