Sister chromatids of a duplicated chromosome are joined by cohesions. Assembling tubulins to form spindle microtubules
Prophase. Prophase, the first stage of mitosis, sees the recruitment of condensin and the start of the condensation process that lasts until metaphase. The chromosomes decrease and thicken during prophase. Chromatids split across the centromere and migrate to opposing poles during anaphase. Telophase: Following the reorganization of nuclear envelopes surrounding each cluster of chromosomes, two nuclei are created by cohesion. Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase, & Telophase are the four fundamental stages of mitosis by cohesions. Cytokinesis, the process of splitting the contents of the cell to create two new cells, begins in either anaphase or telophase and occurs in this exact sequential manner.
Learn more about cohesions
brainly.com/question/1928484
#SPJ4
ok, with what I don't see anything upload please
2500x2500x2500 divided by 500g hope this helped
Evolutionary<span> thought, the conception that </span>species<span> change over time, has roots in antiquity - in the ideas of the </span>ancient Greeks<span>, </span>Romans<span>, and </span>Chinese<span> as well as in </span>medieval Islamic science<span>. With the beginnings of modern </span>biological taxonomy<span> in the late 17th century, two opposed ideas influenced </span>Western<span> biological thinking: </span>essentialism<span>, the belief that every species has essential characteristics that are unalterable, a concept which had developed from </span>medieval Aristotelian metaphysics<span>, and that fit well with </span>natural theology<span>; and the development of the new anti-Aristotelian approach to </span>modern science<span>: as the </span>Enlightenment<span> progressed, evolutionary </span>cosmology<span> and the </span>mechanical philosophy<span> spread from the </span>physical sciences<span> to </span>natural history<span>. </span>Naturalists<span> began to focus on the variability of species; the emergence of </span>paleontology<span> with the concept of </span>extinction<span> further undermined static views of </span>nature<span>. In the early 19th century </span>Jean-Baptiste Lamarck<span> (1744 – 1829) proposed his </span>theory<span> of the </span>transmutation of species<span>, the first fully formed theory of </span>evolution<span>.</span>