Answer:
Welcome to the promised follow-up to our previous examination of the digital television revolution. This week we finally take an opportunity for tortured reference to the revolution being digitized. I suppose everyone is probably making that joke. You heard it here last.
To recap the situation as seen from television-free floor 2B: there are around 275 million TVs in the U.S. These historically were cathode-ray sets receiving analog signals. All stations are to convert to digital signal by mid-June, hastening the obsolescence of analog-only CRTs, the sale of digital converter sets, and the potential change to LCD, plasma, or rear-projection televisions. Last time we learned that CRT recycling is possible and urgent, that Energy Star certifies digital converter boxes, and that Umbra thinks Jon Stewart is cute. Luckily for me I can watch his digital likeness over the internets.
Answer:
Other theories
Explanation:
Here's a quote:
“… as the earth and ocean were probably peopled with vegetable productions long before the existence of animals; and many families of these animals long before other families of them, shall we conjecture, that one and the same kind of living filaments is and has been the cause of all organic life.”
ERASMUS DARWIN
Zoonomia, 1794
The final outputs of the citric acid cycle are ATP, NAD, and CO2
Answer:
False
Explanation:
They do as certain animal species may need to eat certain plants, so if those plants weren't there, it could make the animals die
I think a relative frequency of alleles or genetic variation will remain unchanged for generations. For example if there is a 1 percent genetic variability in an organism of first generation, then the genetic variability in an organism of second generation will also be approximately 1 percent. There will not be a rapid increase in genetic variations. Mutation will not occur or if occur then it will be at the rate of equilibrium.