Answer:
B: hydrosphere!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
My answer will be that both the nurse and the dietitian should tell the child that they can eat sweet. You should know that children with Type 1 Diabetes require injecting insulin to compensate for the effects of glucose. Therefore, the child can eat sweets as long as the portions are watched and the necessary insulin is applied to cover that excess. On the other hand, the child should also know that, from now on, he can gradually substitute sweets and sugar (as a source of carbohydrates) for others such as cereals, fruits, milk and yogurts.
Answer:
In 1953, scientist Stanley Miller performed an experiment that may explain what occurred on primitive Earth billions of years ago. He sent an electrical charge through a flask of a chemical solution of methane, ammonia, hydrogen and water. This created organic compounds including amino acids.
Making amino acids is tricky, even in the laboratory. We know amino acids exist in some kinds of meteorites and interplanetary dust particles. When they rain down on a planet's surface, they import the possible building blocks of life, not necessarily life itself. Scientists think that along the way, there must have been a crucial step that turned atoms into organisms, but they still don't know what it is.
The concept would be crystallization. As magma cools inside or outside of the earth it crystallizes into an igneous rock. Intrusive (formed inside crust) igneous rocks are typically more course grained and contain many different noticeable minerals (for example, granite). Extrusive (formed outside) igneous rocks are typically more porous and are more fine grained then intrusive rocks (example, obsidian).
Plants conduct both photosynthesis and repiration