Answer:
S waves
Explanation:
S waves shake the ground in a shearing, or crosswise, motion that is perpendicular to the direction of travel. These are the shake waves that move the ground up and down or from side to side. S waves are called secondary waves because they always arrive after P waves at seismic recording stations
17/6
Multiply the whole number by the denominator, add the answer to the numerator. That sum becomes the new numerator, denominator stays the same.
Answer:
Below
Explanation:
The fault is always younger than the rocks it cuts across because in order to have cut across those rocks they have to have existed there already, making them older