Answer:
1 out of 4
or
25%
Explanation:
First we draw a Punnett Square for this:
R r
R RR Rr
r Rr rr
So here we have the following genotypes possible for this cross:
RR = homozygous dominant
Rr = heterozygous dominant
rr = homozygous recessive
As you can see out of the four (4) possible outcomes, one (1) of them is rr. So the probability is 1 out of 4 chances or 25%.
<span>A heterogeneous mixture has particles that are not uniformly distributed, but a homogeneous mixture has particles that are uniformly distributed.
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Answer:
D - Technology has changed over the years, but parents still worry about it.
The answer is D because in both of the light pink boxes, it says that the parents are concerned about it, and in the first pink box it talks about the radio and then in the next box it talks about video games, TV, and the internet, which is showing that technology has improved over time.
A and B are wrong because neither of the two pink boxes talk about the year(s) it took place, so the main idea isn't based of of those two. C is wrong because neither of the two pink boxes talk about the dangers of being online. But D is the only option that is included in both boxes, so D is correct.
This is because twenty-four latitude lines were chosen so that 24 hours represents a 360 revolution around the planet. As earth spins on its axis, different places receive sunlight at different times. Each day goes from morning to night as earth turns because the earth spins from west to east therefore the day moves from east to west. Lines of longitude help us keep track of time differences from place to place. Mapmakers divided earths 360 degrees of longitude by 24 hours which results to 15, the time changes by one hour every 15 degrees. It is one hour earlier every 15 degrees of longitude to the west and it is one hour later every 15 degrees of longitude to the east.
Easter Island is a small 63-square-mile patch of land — more than a thousand miles from the next inhabited spot in the Pacific Ocean. In A.D. 1200 (or thereabouts), a small group of Polynesians — it might have been a single family — made their way there, settled in and began to farm. When they arrived, the place was covered with trees — as many as 16 million of them, some towering 100 feet high.
These settlers were farmers, practicing slash-and-burn agriculture, so they burned down woods, opened spaces, and began to multiply. Pretty soon the island had too many people, too few trees, and then, in only a few generations, no trees at all.