I would calmly check the breaker panel to verify that the power hadn't simply gone off again. I'd troubleshoot back to the pump, then its suction pipe from the well, then peek at the water level in the well. If the well had run dry, I'd - still calmly - step into my shop and take the stainless-steel buckets down from the high shelf above the Porter-Cable routers and walk across the road with them. I'd step over the guardrail, then walk down the embankment to the Waits River, where I'd fill my buckets and bring them - full - back to the house.
its been a while since I've done punnett squares, but I'm pretty sure these are right:
- 2 because two have a dominant curly gene
- 2 because two are double recessive
- 0 because none have double dominant
- 2 because two have a double recessive
BTW I didnt check if you're punnett squares were right so the above is assuming they are
<h2>The answer is:</h2>
Expansion and cracking
<h2>Explanation:</h2>
Whenever water freezes, it is expanded about 9 percent. Since the water in moist concrete freezes it producing pressure in the pores of the concrete. The collective effect of freeze-thaw cycles and disruption of aggregate can eventually cause expansion and cracking, scaling, and crumbling of the concrete that is formed from moist.