This is true and false. It's formulated very confusing. I'd be more inclined to stay the statement is false because the theory of evolution didn't seem reasonable because we didn't know the complexity of living cells but rather because it was in line with the predicitons made by the theory and it made more epistemological sense that did creationism.
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Answer:Carbon moves from living things to the atmosphere. Each time you exhale, you are releasing carbon dioxide gas (CO2) into the atmosphere. Animals and plants need to get rid of carbon dioxide gas through a process called respiration. Carbon moves from fossil fuels to the atmosphere when fuels are burned. The carbon cycle is nature's way of reusing carbon atoms, which travel from the atmosphere into organisms in the Earth and then back into the atmosphere over and over again. Most carbon is stored in rocks and sediments, while the rest is stored in the ocean, atmosphere, and living organisms.
Explanation:
The answer is; B
This genotype is similar to that of one parent. It assumes that nondisjunction of chromosome did not happen and there was no fusion of gametes. The offspring cannot have exact genotype as one parent in sexual reproduction, In sexual reproduction, the offspring gets half of its chromosomes from each parent. This is why the chromosome number is reduced by half in the formation of gametes through the process of meiosis.
Answer: Option B) phosphate; hydroxyl; 3'
We identify nucleic acid strand orientation on the basis of important chemical functional groups. These are the phosphate group attached to the 5' carbon atom of the sugar portion of a nucleotide and the hydroxyl group attached to the 3'
carbon atom
Explanation:
For both RNA and DNA, chemical groups such as phosphate (PO3-) attaches to the 5' carbon of the pentose sugar (deoxyribose in DNA, ribose in RNA).
While hydroxyl group (OH) attaches to the 3' carbon atom of the pentose sugar.
Thus, a nucleic acid structure structure reveals a several repeating units of nucleotides where nitrogenous base links to a pentose sugar, who in turns is linked to phosphate group