Rough ER is dotted with ribosomes which give it a "rough" appearance. Smooth ER doesn't contain ribosomes. :) Hope this helps!
dont copy me
Your answer is: No.
Although pottery may seem like the same texture of a fossil and could even be formed to look almost identical to one, it will never be a fossil. Fossils come from once living things like dinosaurs, bugs, dead plants...You cannot develop a fossil it will ALWAYS develop itself.
Hope this helps! Would love brainliest if someone else answers! Trying to get to virtuoso thx!
Answer:
Stratified squamous epithelium
Explanation:
Most animals, including humans, have stratified squamous epithelium in their esophagus. It may include keratin, which gives an extra layer of protection, allowing them to eat bigger and less chewed food. It should be noted that the esophagus has a mucous membrane and because of the muscular layers, called muscularis mucosae, the food can pass rapidly through it preventing damages in its layers due to coarser or abrasive food.
The answer is B., Natural Selection.
Weather certainly doesn't change populations, and genes only caused individuals in a population to be slightly ( genetically-wise ) different from the others. It does cause change, but not change in the whole population over time.
Natural disasters don't change the populations over time either. Natural disasters only caused change in their environment, at most.
So, the only answer left is natural selection, and it makes sense too!
Natural selection is the process where the individuals with better traits suited to survive in that specific environment live on and give those good traits to their offspring.
The individuals with less suited traits to survive will die out, and will not be given an opportunity to reproduce and pass on their less suited traits, so over time, the population will increase of individuals with better suited traits to survive and the individuals with less suited traits will eventually die out, therefore making the entire population change.
Hope I helped you!
All angiosperms have flowers at some stage in their life. ...
Angiosperms have small pollen grains that spread genetic information from flower to flower. ...
All angiosperms have stamens.