China, North Korea, South Korea
Answer:
2.They rode in wagons to the West
and
4.They rode by train to the West.
Explanation:
<u>The way of transportation depends on the time of moving - before 1859. railroads weren't in the construction, and only around the 1870s, the railroad went all the way from East to West.</u>
<u>Before the 1850s, most of the miners and pioneers, especially t the beginning of the wave of moving, used wagons. </u>They carried all the supplies and things in the huge wagons pulled by oxen. Because the wagons were heavy and oxen slow, the moving was slow.
This all changed with the construction of the railroad that helped a lot. In 1895. there were already 5 major railroads operating in Iowa, <u>so if people were living near the train or were moving around this time, they were more likely to use the train to ride to the West.</u>
Explanation:
There is found a mutation in G5W parents during the gamete formation created X-linked dominant disease allele. As the expression of the allele determines the allele that dominant or recessive. Because sometimes the allele becomes complete even then it is incomplete. In many cases, these alleles occur together or express at the same time that is called co dominance. The X-linked inheritance works differently with male and female because the male has XY chromosome and female has only XX chromosome. So a man has chances their son 50% but daughter has more or 99% chances to be inherited by the disease. Females only pass their X chromosome to each son or daughter so the chances from a female dominant inheritance 50% chances of X-linked disease.
<span>in most cases although when both are implemented in a complimentary manner, goals can be achieved more efficiently and smoothly</span>
Answer:
hypokalemia
Explanation:
Furosemide (Lasix diuretics) is a potent diuretic that if administered in excessive amounts, can produce deep diuresis with loss of water and electrolytes. Excessive diuresis can cause hypokalemia, which causes the muscles to weaken, experience cramping or shaking and also lead to arrhythmias.
The factors that led to this conclusion were, among others, the supply of this medicine, the patient's symptoms and the poor diet she was carrying. The recommendation is to have a diet rich in potassium (foods such as bananas, raisins, plums, pears, etc.) and if required, the provision of oral potassium supplements.