We would expect the leaf cells to contain many more chloroplasts. The leaf is the main site of photosynthesis. Chloroplasts contain chlorophyll, a pigment used to collect sunlight which is converted to glucose during photosynthesis.
Early settlers in the town of Dry Gulch drilled wells to pump as much water as they wanted from the single aquifer beneath the town. (An aquifer is an underground body of water.) As more people settled in Dry Gulch, the aquifer level fell and new wells had to be drilled deeper at higher cost.Residents of Dry Gulch have a private incentive to under use water because it is a scarce resource.
Plate boundary zones are the interaction between adjoining plates where they clash, pull separated or slide past each other.
These newly created zones can be a long stretch from few kilometers to hundreds of kilometers.
It is the movement between two plates and the distortion that come about in the boundaries of the zone between the plates, which has given birth to New Zealand's geography which we see it today.
The distortion and mashing caused by the hit of the two great plates have created mountain ranges throughout the country.
Palisade mesophyll cells are closely packed to absorb the maximum light. They are at right angles to the surface of leaf to reduce the number of cross walls. Large vacuole pushes chloroplasts to the edge of a cell. Chloroplasts at edge enable short diffusion path for carbon dioxide and to absorb maximum light. Hope this helped
During metaphase 1, the spindle fibers attach to the centromeres of each chromosome. Both kinetochores of each sister chromatid pair are turned toward the same pole. And 2 members of each chromosome pair (sister chromatids) are pulled into each new cell during anaphase 1.
I think the answer you want is they are called chromatids.