<span>Aquatic biomes are characterized by water</span>
The two main variables in an experiment are the independent and dependent variable.
An independent variable is the variable that is changed or controlled in a scientific experiment to test the effects on the dependent variable.
A dependent variable is the variable being tested and measured in a scientific experiment.
The dependent variable is 'dependent' on the independent variable. As the experimenter changes the independent variable, the effect on the dependent variable is observed and recorded.
For example, a scientist wants to see if the brightness of light has any effect on a moth being attracted to the light. The brightness of the light is controlled by the scientist. This would be the independent variable. How the moth reacts to the different light levels (distance to light source) would be the dependent variable.
When results are plotted in graphs, the convention is to use the independent variable as the x-axis and the dependent variable as the y-axis.
Answer:
Peter is viewing a prepared slide with the 40X objective. His view is
shown below. Unfortunately, the label in the slide has been torn off,
so he is not sure what he is looking at. Based on his observation
alone, can Peter identify the type of organism that these cells come
from? Why or why not?
Yes, Peter will identify identify the organism as label would not deter its identification. Reason being that diagram without labeling would not nullify identification of my organism
Explanation:
<span>James Hutton developed the concept of erosion and deposition.</span>