<span>Around the years 1600 to
1750 are years in which baroque music was widely composed. This was the period
in which musically instruments were being developed in new playing techniques
and established many other forms of arts, such as operas and cantatas.<span>
Johann
Sebastian Bach was born on 1685 during the baroque era, and his composistions
were mostly that of the same style music. He has composed over 300 cantatas
although not all of it has survived in the modern era.
</span></span>
George Frideric Handel was
also born the same year as Bach and his works were also influence by the
baroque era.
<span>
Ludwig van Beethoven was
born by 1770 in which the baroque era has already ended and the new era of
music has followed. </span>
Answer:
When you learn something new neurons in your brain start parallel processing.
Explanation:
In information- processing models there are four stage;
- Encoding- Receiving of data in code format.
- Storage- Accumulation of information in small group in different parts of the brain.
- Retrieval- Reorganize and recapitulation of received data.
- Parallel processing- Keeping the earlier collected data and simultaneously receiving new data.
All these levels similarly work in our brain when a person learn, retain, retrieve something new. A child in its growing stage run through all these phases (0 to 12 years old).
An adult male and female gibbon that are similar in size demonstrate the lack of dimorphism as the result of unequal access to resources within their environment.
<h3>What is dimorphism?</h3>
It should be noted that dimorphism simply means a trait that occurs in different forms in species.
In this case, an adult male and female gibbon that are similar in size demonstrate the lack of dimorphism as the result of unequal access to resources within their environment.
Learn more about dimorphism on:
brainly.com/question/26063115
#SPJ1
The answer is <u><em>BRAIN</em></u> material
have a good day :)
Diocletian, a Roman emperor lived <span>from 284 to 305, and live</span><span> 66 years (245–311). </span>