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Molecular structure of DNA. Nucleotide. Nitrogenous base, phosphate.
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Introduction to the circulatory system and the heart
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Outcomes:
- Determine which mutations are favored by the selection agents of predators and food variety and which mutations are neutral.
- Describe which traits change the survivability of an organism in different environments.
- Experiment with environments which produce a stable population of bunnies, a population that dies out, and a population that takes over the world.
- Track genes through multiple generations.
- Compare how dominant and recessive genes get passed onto offspring.
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Meiosis is a process that creates sex cells (gametes) with half the number of chromosomes of the parent cell. Meiosis has two stages: meiosis I and meiosis II. In meiosis I, homologous chromosomes pair up and exchange genetic material (crossing over). In meiosis II, sister chromatids separate, creating four haploid cells.
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How homologous chromosomes separate into two sets. Prophase I, metaphase I, anaphase I, and telophase I.
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This online interactive lesson discusses what reflections are and provides examples of reflections.
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This online lesson explains what rotations are.
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This video will look at rotation. Rotation involves turning a shape around a set point.
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Skeletons support and protect our bodies. Bugs have exoskeletons outside their bodies, while humans have endoskeletons inside. Our bones are in axial (skull, ribcage, spine) and appendicular (arms, legs) groups. Bone marrow makes blood cells; more specifically, red marrow makes blood and yellow marrow stores fat.