Answer:
No, they are not. The concept of human races appears to be solidly grounded in present-day biology and our evolutionary history. But if you asked that conference of geneticists to give you a genetic definition of race, they wouldn’t be able to do it. Human races are not natural genetic groups; they are socially constructed categories. Genes certainly reflect geography, but unlike geography, human genetic differences don't fall along obvious natural boundaries that might define races.
A frameshift mutation<span> (also called a framing error or a reading </span>frame shift<span>) is a genetic </span>mutation caused<span>by indels (insertions or deletions) of a number of nucleotides in a DNA sequence that is not divisible by three.</span>
I believe it would be (B) Mimicry
the atmospere would drift off into space
none needed
<span>Diffusion is a process of desintegration or disolution. Equilibrium is where all states are equal. Equilibrium works here too, but too many invisible forces drag it into chaos. Equilibrium means less invisible chaos.</span>