Sovi.AI - AI Math Tutor

Scan to solve math questions

QUESTION IMAGE

quiz determining the ages of rocks 8th grade science 6thhr layer rock t…

Question

quiz determining the ages of rocks 8th grade science 6thhr layer rock type age (million years) description a sandstone 10 marine shells b limestone time gap (age unknown) no fossils; eroded surface meets older rock beneath c shale 95 fern impressions and reptile bones d granite time gap (age unknown) no fossils; new rock layer meets much older rock at visible boundary which explanation is true based on the data? a. layer b was formed less than 10 million years ago because it lies beneath a rock layer that is 10 million years old. b. layer c shows discontinuity because two types of fossils overlap.

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

First, analyze each option:

  • For Option A: Layer B has an unknown age (time gap) and lies above Layer A (10 million years old). There is no data to confirm it is less than 10 million years old; in fact, rock layers are typically older as you go deeper, so this is false.
  • For Option B: Layer C has fern and reptile fossils, with no indication of overlapping fossil types or a discontinuity from that cause. Discontinuity would relate to erosion/time gaps, not overlapping fossils, so this is false.

(Note: Assuming these are the only options provided, if there were correct options not fully visible, based on the table, the valid true statement would relate to Layer B or D representing an unconformity (time gap/erosion), but from the given options, neither A nor B is correct. However, based on the visible content, we evaluate the given choices.)

Answer:

Neither Option A nor Option B is correct based on the provided rock layer data.

  • A. Layer B was formed less than 10 million years ago because it lies beneath a rock layer that is 10 million years old. (Incorrect: Rock layers are older deeper; B's age is unknown)
  • B. Layer C shows discontinuity because two types of fossils overlap. (Incorrect: C has consistent fossils, discontinuity is not from overlapping fossils)