The organism that was most likely to live at the same time as brachiopods were
Trilobites
Answer:
No, I don't reckon that water is alive. I don't think that it is "dead" either. It simply just... exists. However, it DOES hold life within it. But the water itself is not alive, because for something to be considered "alive", it must meet the requirements of responding to stimuli, reproducing and growing, and must be dependent on its environment. Water itself cannot be dependent on an environment, because it IS an environment.
This is just my opinion though :)
Answer:
Interkinesis
Explanation:
Meiosis i is the first cell division, where the parent cell divides into two cells. Each of these cells undergoes a second division in meiosis ii, to form a total of four daughter cells.
Between meiosis i and ii there is a rest period. This is called interkinesis. No DNA replication occurs in this stage (unlike in interphase). What does happen is that the nuclear envelopes temporarily reform between telophase I of meiosis I and prophase II of meiosis II Not all organisms have the interkinesis stage, some proceed directly to meiosis II after meiosis I
D is probably right cos you are comparing data