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Which describes the difference between the law of inclusion and the law of crosscutting in relative dating of rocks and fossils?(1 point)
Responses
Intruding objects are older in the law of inclusion.
Intruding objects are older in the law of inclusion.
Bottom layers of rock are younger only in the law of crosscutting.
Bottom layers of rock are younger only in the law of crosscutting.
Intruding objects are younger in the law of inclusion.
Intruding objects are younger in the law of inclusion.
Bottom layers of rock are older only in the law of crosscutting.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Law of inclusion: fragments (inclusions) inside a rock are older than the rock that contains them.
Law of crosscutting: a fault or intrusion that cuts across other rocks is younger than the rocks it cuts.
Law of crosscutting: a fault or intrusion that cuts across other rocks is younger than the rocks it cuts.
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