Food webs normally start at the bottom and work their way up. Like the plants will be at the bottom, and then each level shows the animals getting bigger while losing energy. You continually lose energy as you work your way up an ecosystem, so normally there are only three or four levels. I hope this helps!
The answer to you question in true.
Answer:
The presence of similar <u>fossils(B)</u><u> </u> and <u>rock formations(C)</u> on several different continents supports the theory of Continental Drift.
Explanation:
Alfred Wegener observed fossils of organisms that were not supposed to have survived in the climate of where they were found. Other key findings is that he found fossils of organisms that were found in one continent and the same fossils found on another continent whose edges seem to fit together.
He also observed rock formations or stratas of mountain ranges in one continent seem to fit together with another continent.
<u>Added note:</u>
Even if Alfred Wegener had these evidences to present, his theory of Continental Drift was rejected mainly because he could not explain the mechanism of how the super continent (Pangaea) split.