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Search results 10161 - 10170 of 14167 matching essays
- 10161: The Language of The Cell
- ... causing potentially fatal conditions. Three recent discoveries about the cell tell us that; A) Each cell is not simply controlled by an accelerator and an inhibitor, and the cell has the ability to recognize a great amount of signals. B) The number of signals discovered in the body has increased tremendously. C) Signals within the cell are not, as formerly believed, characteristic of an organ or function, but they are all ...
- 10162: The Internet
- ... it with everybody else. This is not going to be just a trash can, this is going to be a planet-wide rubbish dump. And how will a man benefit from this besides clicking on "great places to check sports and weather", stealing credit card numbers or blackmailing institutions of power and money? We will try to answer this question a bit later . Bit for now let us look at the ...
- 10163: Investigation of Reproduction and Development in Animals
- ... embryos into the uterus for implantation (embryo transfer or ET). Bibliography: Encarta Encyclopedia, Microsoft 96 Kinnear, Judith, Book One: Nature of Biology, The Jacaranda Press, Sydney, 1992. Winston, Robert, Infertility, A Sympathetic Approach, Optima Book, Great Britian, 1994. World Book Encyclopedia, World Book Inc, Chicago, 1991. The Human Body, World Book Inc, Chicago, 1990.
- 10164: Homo Aquaticus?
- ... most of the song, but the right section has only minor effects of song loss. If the left nerve is cut before song develops, the right takes over completely. Human speech centers, too, show a great deal of plasticity. The localization of Braca's and Wernicke's Area in the left hemishpere is more constant than human dexterity: not only right-handers, but also most left- handers, have their speech centers ...
- 10165: The Right To Die
- ... nationally, but for now, the battle still rages on. Bibliography Works Sited Egan, Timothy. Oregons Assisted-Suicide Law Threatened by a Technicality. The New York Times . USA: November 19, 1997. Euthanasia, Synod of the Great Lakes, Reformed Church in America at: http://www.euthanasia.com/lakes.html Horgan, John. The Right to Die. Scientific American. USA : 1996. Mullens, Anne. Timely Death. USA: Knopf, 1996. Reed, Christopher. Oregon Tackles Mercy Killing ...
- 10166: Growth Dynamics of E. coli in Varying Concentrations of Nutrient Broths, pH, and in the Presence of an Antibiotic
- ... 0 producing 3,583,750 cells/mL was found to produce a greater number of cells than that of a pH of 6.0 579,557 cells/mL. The change in nutrients also had a great affect on the cell production (the control produced a final cell number of 619,500 cells/mL). The 0.5x nutrient broth produced 2,205,026 cells/mL while the 2.0x nutrient broth only ...
- 10167: Animalia Vertebrata Mammalia Carnivora Canidae Canis Lupus And Animalia Vertebrata Mammalia Carnivora Canidae Canis Niger
- ... in the United States but still can be found in the Sierra Madre Occidental and the mountains of western Coahuila and eastern Chihuahua, in Mexico. The Eastern of Timber Wolf (Canis lupus lycaon) and the Great Plains or Buffalo Wolf (Canis lupus nubilus) could originally be found on almost 25% of North America. Today, however, due to competition with settlers, the Buffalo Wolves were exterminated by the early 1900s. The Timber ...
- 10168: The Greenhouse Effect
- ... indefinitely. On the other hand, reverse processes could develop such as increased cloud cover and increased absorption of CO2 by phytoplankton in the ocean. These would act as natural feedbacks, lowering temperatures. In fact, a great deal remains unknown about the cycling of carbon through the environment, and in particular about the role of oceans in this atmospheric carbon cycle. Many further uncertainties exist in greenhouse-effect studies because the temperature ...
- 10169: Transitions of Reptiles to Mammals
- ... evolution. The vast majority of mammals have seven cervical (neck) vertebrae, and do not have lumbar ribs, both characteristics are unlike reptiles. The skull of mammals differs markedly from that of reptiles because of the great expansion of the brain. The sphenoid bones that form the reptilian braincase form only the floor of the braincase in mammals. In mammals a secondary palate, that is not present in reptiles, is formed by ...
- 10170: Genetic Engineering, History and Future: Altering the Face of Science
- ... average citizens of the world. But the fact remains, they were accepted and are now an everyday occurrence in our lives. Genetic engineering too is in its period of fear and misunderstanding, but like every great discovery in history, it will enjoy its time of realization and come into full use in society. The world is on the brink of the most exciting step into human evolution ever, and through knowledge ...
Search results 10161 - 10170 of 14167 matching essays
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