Television shows about criminal investigations have been popular for years but, few viewers understand the intricacies of an actual crime scene investigation. If an autopsy is required masked forensic pathologists examine the body. The body -not the murder weapon- is the most important piece of evidence. The exact time of death cannot be known without a witness. A forensic pathologist, however, can estimate the time of death with certainty. Upon death, a human body begins to decompose. It goes through several stages of decomposition, knowing the time of death combined with other evidence, may shed light on the cause of death. Often the pathologist has crime scene information from detectives at the time of the autopsy. Legally, there are five causes of death: natural homicide, suicide, accident, and undetermined. Natural causes of death such as heart disease, cancer, and stroke account for more than half of the natural deaths in the United States annually. Criminal cases usually involve unnatural causes of death such as homicide, suicide, and accident.
Ecology gives all species including us; food, water, shelter, and so on.The smallest difference can set everything off balance. A good example would be global warming. You would think that 2 degrees every decade would be a small change, but nothing in ecology is small. Plants need a certain temperature to thrive, if that temperature changes they die. A certain animal may be dependent on that plant for food and when that plant dies so does that animal. Another animal may also be dependent on that other animal for food, and with that animal gone it will also die. It's a viscous cycle that holds lots of power on us humans.
(I hope that helps)
Eliza Doolittle<span> i think...................</span>
Answer:
If children are inoculated with cowpox taken from the breasts of cattle, they will not develop smallpox.
Explanation:
Conditionals describe conditions necessary for something to happen. These sentences consist of two clauses - the main clause, which contains the result, and the if-clause, which introduces the condition. There are four types of conditionals - the zero, first, second, and third conditionals.
The first conditional tells us about things that might happen in the future. The verb of the if-clause is in the present simple tense, and the one in the main clause is in the future simple tense.
In the given example, inoculation with cowpox is the condition, and children not developing smallpox is the result. This means that the given sentence can be transformed like this:
- <em>If children are inoculated with cowpox taken from the breasts of cattle, they will not develop smallpox.</em>