Asked by claudia 2015
Very few fossils of jellyfish or their close relatives have been found. This makes it hard to trace the evolutionary history of jellyfish using the fossil record. What explains this? (1 point)
Jellyfish fossils are buried deep under the ocean floor, not in land areas where scientists hunt for fossils.
Jellyfish have soft bodies that decay completely before fossilization can occur.
Jellyfish are a relatively new species in the history of living things on Earth and do not have ancient ancestors.
Jellyfish fossils are likely more fragile than other types of fossils and so they degrade before they can be examined.
Jellyfish fossils are buried deep under the ocean floor, not in land areas where scientists hunt for fossils.
Jellyfish have soft bodies that decay completely before fossilization can occur.
Jellyfish are a relatively new species in the history of living things on Earth and do not have ancient ancestors.
Jellyfish fossils are likely more fragile than other types of fossils and so they degrade before they can be examined.
Answers
Answered by
Ms. Sue
I'll be glad to check your answer.
Think about what fossils are made of.
Think about what fossils are made of.
Answered by
claudia 2015
I think is B but I am not sure...thanks for help
Answered by
Ms. Sue
B is correct.
Answered by
claudia 2015
thanks
Answered by
Ms. Sue
You're welcome.
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.