Date:________________ Observations – Label ALL Parts of the Frog External Anatomy of the Frog – External Anatomy #7 [pic] Mouthparts of the Frog – External Anatomy #12 [pic] Digestive system and other Parts of the Frog – Digestive System #3 [pic] Urogenital System of the Frog – Urogenital System #4 [pic] The Frog Heart – Circulatory System #3 [pic] Questions: Use your knowledge of frogs to answer the questions below. 1. Describe how the eyes of a frog close. ________________________________ __________
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Frog Dissection Manual 1. 2. Place the frog on the dissecting pan. Do not pin it down. Use these descriptions and the picture to identify each of the following external structures. A. Head – the anterior end of the frog extending to and including the eardrums mouth – the large opening at the anterior end of the head made up of a maxilla and mandible maxilla – the upper jaw bone mandible – the lower jaw bone external nares (i.e. nostrils) – two small openings on the dorsal surface of the
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Extended Experimental Investigation | May 28 2013 | Drosophila melanogaster lab experiment Question: How do the dominant or recessive genes in particular traits in a cross between a male and female Drosophila determine the traits of its offspring? Aim: to establish whether characteristics produced from the offspring of a drosophila cross are recessive or dominant traits. Hypothesis: If certain phenotypes are expressed in the offspring from the cross of certain Drosophila‚ then the determination
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Experiment #4 (10/31/14) Lab Review Objective To introduce the basic molecules of life and to test for their presence in different substances. Introduction Macromolecules are in all forms of life. These organic compounds are carbohydrates‚ lipids‚ proteins‚ and nucleic acids. These are monomers and they link together into long chains that form polymers. Different reagents can be used to find the presence of these macromolecules. Proteins are made of carbon‚ hydrogen‚ oxygen‚ nitrogen‚ and sometimes
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Edward Dickson CHE101 DS-01 Experiment Date 7/21/2013 Report Submitted 7/21/2013 Title: Experiment #8: Ionic Reactions Purpose: In this lab we will work with aqueous solutions of ionic substances and determine if they are soluble. If the solution appears milky than it is known as a precipitate reaction‚ meaning it is soluble‚ and that the ions separated and became surrounded by water. Precipitates in this experiment are electrically uncharged. To identify which compounds are
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products produced. The uncertainty of this this measurement is ± 1 product. In order for this experiment to be controlled‚ many variable were identified and held constant. If these variables were not to be held constant than the findings of this experiment would be meaningless because there would be no way of desiring if the independent variable was the cause of the changes which were recorded In this experiment‚
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Rivalry between the United States and the Soviet Union for control over the postwar world emerged before World War II had even ended. U.S. presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt ‚ Harry S.Truman‚ and Soviet premier Joseph Stalin never really trusted one another‚ even while working together to defeat the Nazis. This mutual mistrust actually began as far back as 1917‚ when the United States refused to recognize the new Bolshevik government after the Russian Revolution. Stalin also resented the fact that
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European Journal of Social Sciences ISSN 1450-2267 Vol.30 No.2 (2012)‚ pp. 339-351 © EuroJournals Publishing‚ Inc. 2012 http://www.europeanjournalofsocialsciences.com A Study on the Impact of Occupational Stress among Teachers on Job Satisfaction and Job Involvement – An Empirical Study C. Muthuvelayutham Associate Professor‚ Directorate of Online and Distance Education (DODE) Anna University of Technology‚ Coimbatore 47‚ Tamil Nadu‚ India E-mail: drmuthu2009@gmail.com H. Mohanasundaram
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On this form you can express your preferences for modules in the 2013/14 academic year. Please bear in mind the following principles: if you do not‚ you are less likely to receive the modules you might desire. Module descriptions: www.southampton.ac.uk/humanities/undergraduate/courses/our_courses.page You should take exactly 120 credits You should take 60 credits in each semester If you study a combined honours course‚ you must have a minimum of 45 credits from each subject You can
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By establishing a lab that utilized scientific methods to study the human mind and behavior‚ Wundt took psychology from a mixture of philosophy and biology and made it a unique fieBy establishing a lab that utilized scientific methods to study the human mind and behavior‚ Wundt took psychology from a mixture of philosophy and biology and made it a unique field of study. Wundt later wrote the Principles of Physiological Psychology (1874)‚ which helped establish experimental procedures in psychological
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