A good conclusion in a research paper restates the hypothesis so that reader can see the value of argument which either defends or criticizes the hypothesis. If it's a long paper it's a good idea to restate the hypothesis in the conclusion. This reminds the user of the hypothesis and draws the paper together. It also revisits the hypothesis and can provide new insight into the hypothesis. Another reason for restating the hypothesis in the conclusion is to pose questions and open the door for future research.
It's called appendages if that is what you need
I think it should be 24, for there are 48 chromosomes in each cell
A gene is a small section of DNA?<span> that contains the instructions for a </span>specific<span>molecule, usually a </span>protein?. The purpose of genes?<span> is to store information. Each gene contains the information required to build </span>specific proteins<span> needed in an</span>organism<span>.</span>