Answer:
good I've been staying home and doing my school work
Answer:
I'm good. thank you for asking : )
Explanation:
Explain why a clownfish can touch an anemone when other organisms cannot.
After the desired piece of DNA is added to the plasmid, the plasmid is placed into a(n) _____________ for incubation.
Answer:
plasmid vector
Explanation:
Andy and Mario were playing baseball in the summertime. Andy was wearing a black shirt
and complained about it being
excessively hot. What characteristic of how light transfers would cause this problem?
A. reflection
B. refraction
C. absorption
D. diffusion
c.
he's hot because the color of his shirt absorbs a lot of light and warms him.
In each stage, how do nephrons filter waste from blood? Stage 1: Stage 2:
Answer:
stage 1;- the glomeruls filters your blood
stage 2 ;- the tubule returns needed substances to your blood & removes wastes.
Explanation:
Determine how the sugar in the water affects the petal loss.
Write a sentence that states what you found out about the scientific question you just investigated. Provide enough detail so that a friend who did not do the experiment could learn from your description.
Answer: When you add sugar to your plant's water supply, it changes the ability of the plants to absorb water. In some instances this is helpful such as when the plants are dying off, but in other cases this will damage the plants when the plant is already functioning properly.
Explanation:
1.If the DNA is not copied correctly, what effect will it have on the protein that is made?
2. If the protein is not the correct structure, what effect will that have on the trait?
3. Why is it important for the structure of genes/DNA to remain normal and unchanged? What happens if a mutation happens? (Please include the following terms in your answer: gene, mutation, protein, trait).
Can Someone help me with this :)
Answer:
cool,nice
Explanation:
cool nice awesome math greatness
Answer:
what’s the question?
Explanation:
The needle of the compass is pointing toward the magnetic north pole of Earth. What would cause the needle of the compass to point toward the east? Explain why.
Compasses always point north. The magnetic pin in the compass aligns with the top of the planet's magnetic field and points in that direction. A broken compass points east.
Why does a broken compass points east?A strong magnetic field nearby may be the reason a compass points East. A compass may point in that direction if anything has a stronger magnetic attraction than the planet's magnetic field. Power lines, huge batteries, and magnetic metals like iron can cause interference. Their electromagnetic fields decrease quickly with distance.
A compass may point east if the needle's free movement is hindered. Compass needles are free-floating. It can't face North if it's damaged, bent, or blocked by debris. This may explain why the compass needle won't turn.
Learn more about compass, here:
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How many energy transformations and/or transfers happen as electricity is being produced?
-Name at least 4
Answer:
Mechanically – By the action of a force.
Electrically – By an electrical current.
By radiation – By Light waves or Sound waves.
By heating – By conduction, convection or radiation.
Explanation:
Explain to the Econauts how their plans for the next biodome should be different.
Answer:
hope this helps :)
Explanation:
A biodome is a self-sustaining habitat for plants. Students will make a biodome in a recycled soda bottle and watch as their seeds grow. Students will observe and understand how the water in the biodome continues to recycle itself through condensation and evaporation.
The codes found in DNA, for an organism's traits, are copid by the cells m-RNA by producing special units called codons.
These codons are represented by...
A. Four random nitrogenous bases
B. An anti-codon called t-RNA
C. Base pairs A-T and C-G
D. Three nitrogenous bases in a sequence
Answer:
During this process, the DNA sequence of a gene is copied into RNA. Before transcription can take place, the DNA double helix must unwind near the gene that is getting transcribed. The region of opened-up DNA is called a transcription bubble.
Explanation:
whats the overall population of a bearded dragon? (over the whole world not a specific area)
Answer:
The official conservation status of the bearded dragon is Least Concern. The population of these reptiles remains steady in Australia. Plus, there are over 900 bearded dragons living in zoos throughout the world.
Explanation:
Answer:over 900 in zoos
Explanation:
Monarch butterflies have very long tubular tongues. What is the most likely function of this adaptation?
Question 31 options:
to defend the butterfly from predators
to obtain liquid food from flowers
to sense changes in the environment
to dig holes in the soil for shelter
Babies cry when they are hungry or thirsty. When they cry their parents usually respond, go to and pick up the baby, and give him or her food or milk. Over time, the baby learns that a parent will come when he or she cries. This is a type of learned response called
Question 30 options:
conditioning
imprinting
mimicry
survival
(k12)
Answer:
Question 31 - to obtain liquid food from flowers
Question 30- survival
Explanation:
Butterflies need longer tongues to get into longer flowers and obtain the nectar and liquid food from inside.
Survival is the answer because babies need food and water to survive and they learned a way to get the things that they need.
Which foods would be classified as fats? (Select all that apply.) no links
-vegetables
-fruit
-dairy
-fish
-water
-nuts
Answer:
fish nuts
Explanation:
I don't have an explanation but it's true
complete each word on the second screenshot (just fill in the blank basically)
Answer:
.
Explanation:
What questions do you have about our origins? What clues in nature can we look for to investigate this mystery?
Answer: Humans first evolved in Africa, and much of human evolution occurred on that continent. The fossils of early humans who lived between 6 and 2 million years ago come entirely from Africa. Most scientists currently recognize some 15 to 20 different species of early humans.
Explanation:
What is an example of plant organism structure and functions that help plants survive in their ecosystem? [Question for fun :)]
A: Plant seeds are part of their reproduction process and help make sure the species survives.
B: Plants, as producers, make food with the help of their leaves and sunlight.
C: Plants lack structures that serve a function because plants are stationary.
D: Plants have specialized parts like thorns that help protect them from being eaten.
Answer:
A, B, and D can really all help.
Explanation:
Reproduction procceses help chances of the species growing into larger numbers. Plants being able to make their own food allows them a greater chance of surviving in harsher conditions, without the struggle of literally finding food. PLants with thorns, like roses, help prevents animals from attempting to bite it.
what Willa hypothesis become if it is supported by repeated experiments A a prediction B a scientific theory c a conclusion d a control
Answer:
It is B
Explanation:
B. Scientific theory
A scientific theory is an explanation supported by scientific evidence. How ever many times you test it, you will get the same result.
Answer:
a
Explanation:
you need to predict what will happen each time you do an experiment
WILL GIVE BRAINLIEST! 50 POINTS
What causes air masses to move?
When prevailing westerlies shift directions and move toward the west.
Weather conditions change rapidly to produce storms.
A collision takes place between two natural wind patterns.
Long, narrow bands of wind blow in the upper atmosphere.
Answer:-The cause of the air masses to move is: The current of air and wind causes the air masses to move. The change in the air masses is the reason for the change in the weather.
Explanation:
Air masses are moved by differences in air pressure, which is caused by uneven heating of the earth's surface by the sun. This creates areas of high and low pressure, and air masses will move from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure.
What is air mass ?An air mass is a large body of air in the atmosphere that has similar temperature and humidity characteristics throughout its horizontal extent.
Air masses are classified based on their source region, which can be over land or water and in different latitudes. As air masses move from their source regions, they can bring changes in weather conditions to the areas they move over.
The movement of air masses can also be influenced by the rotation of the earth, which causes the Coriolis effect. This effect causes air masses in the Northern Hemisphere to be deflected to the right, and air masses in the Southern Hemisphere to be deflected to the left.
The collision of two air masses with different properties, such as temperature and humidity, can also cause movement and create weather conditions.
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It has the biggest particles and feels rough when you rub it. It is usually found near rivers
seas.
(1 Point)
O Clay
O Loam
Silt
O
Sand
Section 1: Overview of Lab
What is the purpose of the lab?
Answer:
the purpose of lab are:
1. it is used as storing different chemical and its tool.
2. it is used as experiment place.
What is the wavelength measurement?
A. 2 m
B. 4 m
C..2 m
D. 4 m
can some one help me with this:)
9. Please use the image of embryo development below to answer the following questions. All of the animals below are vertebrates.
Which of the following shows the correct order of development for mammal embryos from left to right? (Left is early. Right is just before birth.) *
A. A
B. B
C. C
D. D
E. E
F. F
What type of relationship exists between the common teasel and all of the other plants?
Answer:
it pollinates it
Explanation:
the comma teasel is a butterfly that pollinates plants
Which of the following statements correctly explains how this process works?
What are the steps of mitosis? explain the steps
Today, mitosis is understood to involve five phases, based on the physical state of the chromosomes and spindle. These phases are prophase, prometaphase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase.
Prophase
Mitosis begins with prophase, during which chromosomes recruit condensin and begin to undergo a condensation process that will continue until metaphase. In most species, cohesin is largely removed from the arms of the sister chromatids during prophase, allowing the individual sister chromatids to be resolved. Cohesin is retained, however, at the most constricted part of the chromosome, the centromere (Figure 9). During prophase, the spindle also begins to form as the two pairs of centrioles move to opposite poles and microtubules begin to polymerize from the duplicated centrosomes.
Prometaphase
Prometaphase begins with the abrupt fragmentation of the nuclear envelope into many small vesicles that will eventually be divided between the future daughter cells. The breakdown of the nuclear membrane is an essential step for spindle assembly. Because the centrosomes are located outside the nucleus in animal cells, the microtubules of the developing spindle do not have access to the chromosomes until the nuclear membrane breaks apart.
Prometaphase is an extremely dynamic part of the cell cycle. Microtubules rapidly assemble and disassemble as they grow out of the centrosomes, seeking out attachment sites at chromosome kinetochores, which are complex platelike structures that assemble during prometaphase on one face of each sister chromatid at its centromere. As prometaphase ensues, chromosomes are pulled and tugged in opposite directions by microtubules growing out from both poles of the spindle, until the pole-directed forces are finally balanced. Sister chromatids do not break apart during this tug-of-war because they are firmly attached to each other by the cohesin remaining at their centromeres. At the end of prometaphase, chromosomes have a bi-orientation, meaning that the kinetochores on sister chromatids are connected by microtubules to opposite poles of the spindle.
Metaphase
Next, chromosomes assume their most compacted state during metaphase, when the centromeres of all the cell's chromosomes line up at the equator of the spindle. Metaphase is particularly useful in cytogenetics, because chromosomes can be most easily visualized at this stage. Furthermore, cells can be experimentally arrested at metaphase with mitotic poisons such as colchicine. Video microscopy shows that chromosomes temporarily stop moving during metaphase. A complex checkpoint mechanism determines whether the spindle is properly assembled, and for the most part, only cells with correctly assembled spindles enter anaphase.
Anaphase, is the stage of mitosis after the process of metaphase, when replicated chromosomes are split and the newly-copied chromosomes are moved to opposite poles of the cell
Telophase and Cytokinesis
Mitosis ends with telophase, or the stage at which the chromosomes reach the poles. The nuclear membrane then reforms, and the chromosomes begin to decondense into their interphase conformations. Telophase is followed by cytokinesis, or the division of the cytoplasm into two daughter cells. The daughter cells that result from this process have identical genetic compositions.
Answer:
Prophase (From Greek words meaning “before” and “stage”):
Chromatin condenses into 2 visible rod structures, chromosomes, in a process called chromatin condensation (inspired name, right?).
Due to the DNA replication in interphase, there are two identical copies of each chromosome, referred to as sister chromatids, attached by a centromere.
At the end of prophase the nucleolus dissolves.
Technically this next section is classed as a separate stage but for all intents and purposes it is usually bundled up in the end of Prophase and the beginning of Metaphase. It’s called… *drum roll*… Prometaphase.
What happens here is the nuclear membrane breaks apart and chromosomes form structures known as kinetochores. For A-level you don't really need to know about these so I'll stop myself there.
Metaphase (from Greek meaning “adjacent” “stage”):
The centromeres of all chromosomes line up along the equator of the cell. Spindle fibres form between the poles of the cell and the centromeres.
Anaphase (more Greek! Means “up” “stage”):
The centromeres are split and the spindle fibres contract, pulling the sister chromatids to opposite poles of the cell. The chromatids form a V/Y shape as they are pulled backwards.
The cell also stretches into an oval (this movement of the cell is due to non-kintochore spindle fibres pushing against each other, but this is far above A-level).
Telophase (“end” “stage”):
The effects of prophase and prometaphase are effectively reversed here.
Two nuclei form in the cell, at both ends of the cell. Nuclear envelopes are reformed from components of the parent cell’s envelope.
There are 2 theories about how this happen:
Vesicle fusion: fragments of the initial nuclear membrane fuse to rebuild the nuclear membrane
Reshaping of the endoplasmic reticulum
The nucleoli also re-form, any remaining spindle fibres depolymerise and the chromosomes begin to unwind and expand into the chromatin that is seen in interphase.
Cytokenises begins, in which a Myosin II and actin filament ring contract to cleave the cell in two, resulting in two genetically identical daughter cells.
After that, they're both straight back to interphase.
Explanation:
4. Why are fossils of the animal Archaeopteryx used as evidence that birds and dinosaurs may be related? *
In each answer, "they" is referring to the Archaeopteryx fossils.
A. They were older than dinosaurs, but not as old as birds.
B. They have some characteristics of both birds and dinosaurs.
C. They were not able to survive as well as birds, but better than dinosaurs.
D. They were found near both bird and dinosaur fossils in rock layers.
Help me plsss no links!!!
Signals from _______ and the body's _______ are received by the brain and the spinal cord.
Once signals are processed and _______ by the central nervous system, a response is sent back to the body.
A central nervous system is also responsible for programming _______ and _______.
The central nervous system includes the brain and spinal cord.Signals from senses and the body's organs are received by the brain and the spinal cord.Once signals are processed and interpreted by the central nervous system, a response is sent back to the body.A central nervous system is also responsible for programming reflexes and instincts.
(I think that's good)
Hi again!!! I finished my science course a bit early so allow me to help! I noticed you were trying to fill in your notes for 6.01 nervous system video so here is what I had put down!
Your internal organs and your senses send signals to your brain and spinal cord.
Once signals are processed and interpreted by the central nervous system, a response is sent back to the body
The central nervous system is also responsible for programming instincts and reflexes like twitching when you're tickled or blushing when you get a flattering text.
Hope this helps! Brainly is not needed but appreciated!
Construct a brief argument to refute Cal’s claim in the following scenario.
Cal is a high-school biology student learning about bodily systems. When studying, Cal focuses on the nervous system because he feels it is the most important system in the body.
Answer: The cardiovascular System
Explanation:
The cardiovascular system homes the heart. The heart is a pump that circulates oxygen and blood throught your body essentially keeping you alive. Without the heart your brain would be dead because your brain would not be getting enough oxygen to funtion. So, although the brain and spinal cord are very important the heart is also if not more for it is the only way you live. You can be brain dead and still alive but not heart stopped and alive.
I hope this helps!
Answer: The Cardiovascular System
Explanation: The other person explained well lol