<Ul> <Li> Mitre Peak, New Zealand, 1,683 m above Milford Sound </Li> <Li> The Lion, New Zealand, 1,302 m above Milford Sound (drops from approx 1280m to sea level in a very short distance) </Li> <Li> The Elephant, New Zealand, has cliffs falling approx 1180m into Milford Sound, and a 900m drop in less than 300m horizontally </Li> <Li> Kalaupapa, Hawaii, 1,010 m above Pacific Ocean </Li> <Li> Great Australian Bight </Li> <Li> Zuytdorp Cliffs in Western Australia </Li> <Li> Ball's Pyramid, a sea stack 562m high and only 200m across at its base </Li> <Li> The Twelve Apostles (Victoria). A series of sea stacks in Australia, ranging from approximately 50 to 70 m above the Bass Strait </Li> <Li> Tasman National Park, Tasmania, has 300m dolerite sea cliffs dropping directly to the ocean in columnar form </Li> <Li> Lovers Leap, Highcliff, and The Chasm, on Otago Peninsula, New Zealand, all 200 to 300 m above the Pacific Ocean </Li> </Ul> <Li> Mitre Peak, New Zealand, 1,683 m above Milford Sound </Li> <Li> The Lion, New Zealand, 1,302 m above Milford Sound (drops from approx 1280m to sea level in a very short distance) </Li> <Li> The Elephant, New Zealand, has cliffs falling approx 1180m into Milford Sound, and a 900m drop in less than 300m horizontally </Li>

Where are the oldest layers of rock usually found in a cliff made from sedimentary rock