Carbon in the atmosphere (CO2)
Carbon in plants and animals
It must move through at le...
Carbon in the atmosphere (CO2)
Carbon in plants and animals
It must move through at least 5 different living things (plants/animals) - be sure that the plants/animals would actually interact with each other in nature (ex no african lions eating arctic foxes) this may require a bit of research.
Extra credit - show it becoming fossil fuels and the fossil fuels being burned to release CO2 back into the atmosphere.
In plants/animals- either how its stored in the plant/animal then the plant/animal being eaten or the steps of cellular respiration
In plants- the steps of photosynthesis (how it goes from being CO2 to glucose)
Paragraph / written story
Answers: 3
Biology, 21.06.2019 14:10
Select the correct answer. which formula describes newton’s second law of motion? a. force=mass x accerlaration b. mass/accerlaration c. mass x volacity d. mass/ volacity
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Hybrid instruments that play sounds that are part sampled and part synthesized are known as:
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Ialready know the answers to these questions and they are on the attachment. but i just need to know why that answer is the correct one. plz asap! this is for a report that i need to email by 10!
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What best explains whether bromine (br) or neon (ne) is more likely to form a covalent bond? bromine forms covalent bonds because it has seven valence electrons, but neon has eight valence electrons and already fulfills the octet rule. bromine forms covalent bonds because it has many electron shells, but neon has only two electron shells and is tightly bound to its electrons. neon forms covalent bonds because it can share its valence electrons, but bromine has seven valence electrons and can gain only one more electron. neon forms covalent bonds because it has only two electron shells, but bromine has many electron shells and will lose electrons in order to fulfill the octet rule.
Answers: 3
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