Four major components of biodiversity are:
1. Genetic diversity - refers to the genetic variation that occurs among members of the same species.
2. Species diversity - (taxonomic diversity) refers to the variety of species or other taxonomic groups in an ecosystem
3. Ecosystem diversity - refers to the variety of biological communities found on earth. With ecosystem diversity, its two levels are generally considered, which are communities and ecosystems.
4. Functional diversity - refers to the variety of biological processes, function or characteristics of a particular ecosystem.
Answer: 1. a. Tail Tail, b. Tall short, c. short short, d. purple flower purple flower, e. purple flower white flower, f. white flower, white flower. g. tall tall and purple flower purple flower, h. tall short and white flower white flower, i. short short and purple flower and white flower, j. short short and white flower white flower, k. tall short and purple flower and white flower. 2. a. tall, purple flower, b. tall, short, purple flower and white flower, c. tall short and white flower, d. tall short and purple flower an white flower, 3. a. 4. Tt, b. 3. TT, c. 5. tt, d. 1. T, e. 2. t.
Explanation:
They arrive after P waves.
They travel through solids.
S waves (Secondary or Shear waves) are known to be type of waves that travel through the solid and also travel slower when compared with P-waves. S-waves are refers to as shear waves because they don’t change the volume of the materials through which they travel or propagate, they shear it. Furthermore, S-waves are transverse waves because they vibrate ground in transverse direction or perpendicular to the direction in which the waves travels.
Answer:
Obsidian is an igneous rock that forms when molten rock material cools so rapidly that atoms are unable to arrange themselves into a crystalline structure. It is an amorphous material known as a "mineraloid." The result is a volcanic glass with a smooth uniform texture that breaks with a conchoidal fracture (see photo).
hope this helps
A process that involves rearrangement of the molecular or ionic structure of a substance, as opposed to a change in physical form or a nuclear reaction.