Answer:
B Glycolysis occurs in both prokaryotic cells and eukaryotic cells.
Explanation:
The scenario that best supports the claim that organisms of different domains share a common ancestor is option B.
This is because glycolysis occurs in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells.
Recall that a prokaryote cell is a cell that does not have well defined nucleus and are unicellular while eukaryotes have well defined nucleus and are multicellular.
Therefore, because glycolysis occurs in both, it suggests that they share a common ancestor.
The moon travels at 2,288 mph. In a day it travels 1,423,000 miles.
I think that both of those colonies were formed by Puritans. The Puritans, while not technically kicked out of England, were certainly very unpopular because they had been very closely tied up in the English Civil War shortly before that.
Answer:
No
Explanation:
There is a famous theory by Kenneth Kitchen that has been used about this topic very widely, the theory itself is too hard to summarize with the limited character so I'll use a singular quote: The absence of evidence is not the evidence of absence. In other words, just because you don't see it doesn't mean its not there and vice versa. This theory basically goes off of hope that something is there just because initial signs point to it. The reason its used in arguments like this is because it basically justifies someone doing something irrational as taking away someone's individual rights for suspicion's they have neither confirmed nor denied kind of like Schrodinger's cat. But this is told from the catcallers perspective and not the victim itself, not only have you taken away their rights because you thought something , you didn't even have to prove any of your accusations. In other words its the land of the free, and here we have a court of lie where a person or persons are liable to meet these accusations in a court of their peers for a fair trial before anyone's rights can be revoked, this isn't a 'partriot' act, its a fear act. And fear is the degrader of the mind , and the plague of society.
<span>pertains to the significance of living or existence in general. </span>