Answer:
My answer (that the information we have about codon structure is limited to the observations we can make now) is similar to the first part of your answer: that the number of amino acids that can be encoded is a function of codon length, in that both imply the (circular) argument that we must need more than 14 amino acids (plus a start and a stop, making 16) because we observe three nucleotide codons rather than two nucleotide codons. It would be nice to have a noncircular argumentf for why the minimum number of distinct amino acids is more than 14, but that is beyond my ability to construct
C) ribosomes and mitochondria
True,because I got it right on a test I took.Hope you have a great day
No they do not follow the Carnegie stages of development
The chloroplasts are the cellular organelles that in the eukaryotic photosynthetic cells that deal with photosynthesis. They are limited by an envelope formed by two concentric membranes. The chloroplast is surrounded by two membranes.