The correct answer is - No.
The Cambrian explosion is a term used for the big and rapid diversification of the animal species, but it is not the period in which the animal life started. The animal life started in the period between 620 and 550 million years ago, in what is known as the Vendian Period. In the Vendian Period, the first complex animal organisms appeared, started to develop and evolve, though it is not a period where there was a high diversification of the species. The later Cambrian Period provided better living conditions, and that resulted in a so called ''explosion of life'', which resulted in much more new species developing and evolving.
Humans get D vitamin from sunlight. the plants perform photosynthesis and grow , we eat those fruits and vegetables grown in the plants. so indirectly we humans and other animals are benifitted from sun sunlight . flesh eating animals eat herbivores animala so they are also benifitted
<span>The mirror is used to focus light through the opening in the in the stage of the microscope.</span>
Answer:
It could lead to several later problems in the cell.
Explanation:
Removing a piece of DNA could severely affect the cell but it could also cause nothing. Depending on the part that is damaged, it could codify for a vital protein but it could also be an intron, which are pieces of DNA that don't codify for any protein. This has been recently researched and even though there are introns that could cause some serious trouble, most of them are an unknown matter to nowadays scientists. Anyway, a wrongly repaired sequence could end in a mutation that can potentially damage the cell and therefore the organism.