<h2>Order of parts of a microscope
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First – ocular lens
Second – Body tube
Third – Revolving Nosepiece
Fourth – Objective lens
Fifth – Coverslip
Explanation:
Ocular lens: The lens present in the eyepiece at the top of the microscope, close to the eyes, through which a person looks through the microscope to view the specimen. Magnification of ocular lens in a compound microscope is usually 10x
Body tube: The tube that connects the eyepiece with the objective of the microscope for continuous optical alignment.
Revolving Nosepiece: The turret that holds the objective and revolves to select the objective lens according to its magnification
Objective lens: The objective lens is located above the specimen rack. Objective lens creates the primary image of the specimen viewed through the eyepiece. A single compound microscope can have more than two objective lens and their magnification ranges from 4x, 10x, 40x, 100x power.
Coverslip: The cover glass which covers the objective lens and prevent from touching the specimen
. This is the object directly above the specimen.
They have very sharp teeth to cut through their prey, or try to escape if they are trapped
Their bodies are very narrow, enabling them to be very quick and nimble, it also enables them to hide it tight spaces
Their teeth also enables them to escape a fishermen's line ( I'm a fishermen and I've lost many barracuda due to those teeth.)
I hope this helped
Heat & Pressure ( So I guess in this answer choices it's " Heat up" )
The reason it's not " melt " because if melting were to take place then that would make Magma, and magma isn't metamorphic rock.
Answer:
B. it expands and shrinks in the soil
It has more similarity to fossils in layer A than layer D.