2013‚ Section 3 Prepared By Md Abdulla Al Mamun Fahim ID: 102 0366 030 Mahidur Rahman Khan ID: 102 0625 030 Md Nurul Azim Rifat ID: 101 0847 030 Tahsin Shahab Uddin ID: 101 0692 030 Prepared for Dr. S.M. Mostafa Kamal Khan Department of Biology and Microbiology North South University Date of Submission: 20th August‚ 2013 Sl | Topic | Page | 1 | Introduction | 2 | 2 | Description | | | 2.1 Impact on Air | 3 | | 2.2 Impact on Water | 3 | | 2.3 Impact on Soil Pollution | 5 |
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Andrés Becerra Espinoza Ms. Mary Glenn English 10th Grade March‚ 21 2013 What is the Deep Web Surface Web and its Benefits There is a big influence of technology on our daily life. Electronic devices‚ multimedia and computers are things we have to deal with everyday. The Internet‚ especially‚ is becoming more and more important for nearly everybody as it is one of the newest and most forward-looking media and surely -“the”- medium of the future. (Markus Temmel‚ Martina Theuermann‚
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Life PowerPoint® Lecture Presentations for Biology Eighth Edition Neil Campbell and Jane Reece Lectures by Chris Romero‚ updated by Erin Barley with contributions from Joan Sharp Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education‚ Inc.‚ publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings Overview: Inquiring About the World of Life • Evolution • Biology Response Evolutionary to the environment adaptation • Life is recognized by what livings things do • Biology consists of more than memorizing factual details
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Section 1 : Identifying the Genetic Material Griffith’s Experiments In 1928‚ Frederick Griffith‚ a bacteriologist‚ was trying to prepare a vaccine against pneumonia. A vaccine is a substance that is prepared from killed or weakened disease-causing agents‚ including certain bacteria. The vaccine is introduced into the body to protect the body against future infections by the disease-causing agent. Griffith discovered that harmless bacteria could turn virulent when mixed with bacteria that cause
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Echinoderm Echinoderm diversity Scientific classification Kingdom: Animalia Subkingdom: Eumetazoa Superphylum: Deuterostomia Phylum: Echinodermata Klein‚ 1734 Subphyla & Classes Homalozoa † Gill & Caster‚ 1960 Homostelea † Homoiostelea † Stylophora † Ctenocystoidea † Robison & Sprinkle‚ 1969 Crinozoa Crinoidea Paracrinoidea † Regnéll‚ 1945 Cystoidea † von Buch‚ 1846 Asterozoa Ophiuroidea Asteroidea Echinozoa Echinoidea Holothuroidea Ophiocistioidea † Helicoplacoidea †
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tested • Experiments must be repeatable • Examples of the Limitations of Science Scientific Method 1. 2. 3. 4. Initial OBSERVATIONS Formulation of QUESTIONS Generation of a testable HYPOTHESIS (= a tentative explanation) and an alternative hypothesis Making of PREDICTIONS using deductive reasoning States what results are expected if the hypothesis is correct. An “If ______‚ then _____” process 5. TESTING through controlled experiments and unbiased observations Experiments and results
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dispose of CO2‚ a bi product of respiration. An efficient gas exchange system has 3 requirements. It must have a large surface area over which the gases can diffuse. A large surface area maximises the amount of area available for the gases to exchange. It must also be moist. Oxygen must first dissolve into a fluid before it can diffuse into a cell. Having a moist gas exchange surface ensures the gases can be dissolved. Thirdly‚ the membrane through which gases diffuse must be thin. Gas exchange is driven
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used for plant development research | 1.) Tiny Genome- Therefore it is easy to study the genes and also to manipulate the genes.2.) Short Life Cycle- Experiments conducted on the A.thaliana will have observable results fast as the development of the plant is rapid.3.) Small size-can be cultivated in a tiny space and this is vital because research areas usually have space limitations.4.) Male and female sex organs available on the same flower- vital for plant genetic mating research | 1.) Pests- Pests
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Just below the surface The story is written by Kate Nivison and takes place in a London suburb in an upper class environment (p. 41‚ l. 14) in modern time (p. 42‚ l. 23). It is a first person narrator so we sympathize with Indrani. Indrani: * Is an Indian woman (p. 42‚ l. 37) * Is education‚ but not highly educated * She is very bigoted (p. 42‚ p. 29-30) * She thinks the British people are xenophobic (the woman in the shop and the men from the council‚ p. 43‚ l. 15) *
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Root Surface Caries Caries can affect any surface of the teeth. The most commonly seen caries are found on the crown of a tooth‚ above the cemento-enamel junction‚ it is also possible for caries to form on the root surface‚ below the cemento-enamel junction. Dental root caries has received a great deal of attention in the past few decades. A variety of different patients are at risk for root surface caries. Dentists use several methods of treatment. Root surface caries are also called cemental
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