Answer:
Benign is a non- cancerous growth on the body. a malignant tumor is a cancerous tumor.
Answer
The term “evidence,” as it relates to investigation, speaks to a wide range of information sources that might eventually inform the court to prove or disprove points at issue before the trier of fact. Sources of evidence can include anything from the observations of witnesses to the examination and analysis of physical objects. It can even include the spatial relationships between people, places, and objects within the timeline of events. From the various forms of evidence, the court can draw inferences and reach conclusions to determine if a charge has been proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
Considering the critical nature of evidence within the court system, there are a wide variety of definitions and protocols that have evolved to direct the way evidence is defined for consideration by the court. Many of these protocols are specifically addressed and defined within the provisions of the Canada Evidence Act (Government of Canada, 2017).
In this chapter, we will look at some of the key definitions and protocols that an investigator should understand to carry out the investigative process:
Explanation:
Answer:
The answer to the question: In what part of the spinal cord would you expect to find myelinated axons, would be, in the white matter of the spinal cord.
Explanation:
The spinal cord, the roadway and connection between the brain and the rest of the body, and a vital part of life itself, is formed by covering tissue, fluid, and most importantly, by the neuronal bodies and axons that form the entire system of the CNS, and ANS, and which also connect these systems with the PNS (peripheral nervous system), and the different organs. One visual characteristic of the cord is it having two colors, white and gray. The white matter surrounds the gray matter. The reason for this white color in the white matter, which is really the connecting filaments that go up and down the CNS, and connect with the gray matter, is that white matter neurons and axons are covered by myelin, an insulating and cushioning covering that surrounds the cell´s axons and also helps the nerve impulses move much faster and with higher precision, than in the white matter.