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MAVERICK [17]
3 years ago
6

What would we have to do to make water on mars drinkable? Is there water under the surface? Would we be able to make use of that

water? Would we be able to make more water than the planets already has? Does the planet have enough water to sustain human life?
Biology
1 answer:
Gala2k [10]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

Water is collected to compress carbon dioxide gas and pass it over rocks and soil of Mars.

Explanation:

To compress carbon dioxide gas and pass it over rocks and soil of Mars. The gas dissolves and some of the water locked up in the soil clean water which can be collected and stored. There is water present under the surface and present on the surface in the form of ice. Yes, we would be able to make use of that water. Yes, we can produce more water which is present in the air in vapor form. No, mars have very limited water and water in vaporize form which can be turn into liquid form.

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o-na [289]
I'd say one was what girls where now. So, they think its okay to have sex. Causing more and more young women and teens to have a pregnancy, and because of insurance the more kids you have, the more money you get from the state.  
7 0
3 years ago
Which mutations is most likely to cause a phenotypic change?
melomori [17]

The question is incomplete. The complete question is as follows:

Which of the following mutations is most likely to cause a phenotypic change?

A) a duplication of all or most introns

B) a large inversion whose ends are each in intergenic regions

C) a nucleotide substitution in an exon coding for a transmembrane domain

D) a single nucleotide deletion in an exon coding for an active site

E) a frameshift mutation one codon away from the 3' end of the nontemplate strand

Answer: D) a single nucleotide deletion in an exon coding for an active site

Explanation:

Deletion or insertion of a single nucleotide in an axon coding for an active site is called frameshift mutation.

The sequence of codons is read during translation, in order to synthesize a amino acids chain and form a protein from the nucleotide sequence. Frameshift mutations occur when the usual codon sequence is broken by the deletion or addition of one or more nucleotides. For example, if only one nucleotide is removed from the axon sequence during the RNA splicing process, then there will be a disrupted reading frame for all codons before and after the mutation. This may result in several incorrect amino acids being introduced into the protein. Disruption in protein sequence will cause phenotypic change.

Hence, the correct option is D) a single nucleotide deletion in an exon coding for an active site .

5 0
4 years ago
Imagine you discover a yeast mutant that exhibits a general inability to grow and thrive compared to wild-type yeast. You predic
Svet_ta [14]

Answer:

Some of the other process of gene expression

Explanation:

If the tRNA and rRNA levels are normal we can assume that the translation machinery is working properly. So, this suggest that the defect might appear in some of the previous steps of gene expression: replication, transcription, mRNA processing.

Gene expression is a set of processes that occur in the cell and that use information from the genetic material (gene) to produce gene product (e.g. protein). Gene expression is highly controlled and regulated because it is critical for an organism's development.

6 0
3 years ago
Sidney Brenner argued that the code was nonoverlapping because he considered that coding restrictions would occur if it were ove
pogonyaev

Answer:

High School Biology 10+5 pts

Sidney Brenner argued that the code was nonoverlapping because he considered that coding restrictions would occur if it were overlapping. A second major argument against an overlapping code involved the effect of a single nucleotide change. In an overlapping code TWO adjacent amino acids would be affected by a point mutation, while in a nonoverlapping code ONE amino acid(s) would be affected.

ANSWER:

TWO

ONE

3 0
3 years ago
Connective tissue structures that attach muscles to bones are known as
Luda [366]
A. Tendons. Ligaments connect bones/cartilage to each other typically at a joint.
6 0
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