By mating with desired traits is your answer
You would generally not be able to recover fossils from volcanic or plutonic rock, so looking around in an area on active volcanic islands would yield nothing.
You always want to look in the layers of sedimentary rock for fossils. The Grand Canyon would be a great place to see these layers as well as a shallow ocean because you may find the remains of prehistoric shark teeth or bones protruding through the surface of the sand.
The answer is Active volcanic islands.
If this is a question in which you can choose more than one answer it may be smart to also choose a shallow ocean as well. This is because it is difficult to get the tools and materials necessary down in the water and would be difficult to get deep enough underneath sand to start digging into actual fossil bearing rock.
So in that case, the answer would then be both Active volcanic islands and A shallow ocean.
the answer to this question is solar system, earth is a singular planet, galaxy contains stars but does dot orbit around a central star, and the sun is a star
It is C. A message is distributed across the plasma membrane.
Thick myosin filaments of muscle are associated with the characteristics of contractility.
Explanation:
The muscle contractility is provided mainly the thick and the thin muscle filaments. Thick muscle filaments are constituted by the contractile protein, myosin. Thin filament is composed of actin.
Owing to its thickness, myosin protein is made up of six chains of polypeptides with four lighter (molecular mass is low) ones and two heavier (molecular mass is high) ones.
The two heavier polypeptide chains twist together like two twisted golf clubs and forms a coiled-rod like structure. This coiled structure looks like a two stranded double helix.
The globular heads point out from the main body in each coiled structure and adheres with the head of the actin filaments. The tails made up of lighter chains point towards the M lines of the sarcomere.
During muscle contraction, the myosin head will attach with its myosin-binding site.