What are the phases of mitosis?
PMAT: Prophase,Metaphase,Anaphase, and Telephase.
What are the rings of the DNA made of?
Phosphate and sugar.
What are some heredity traits?
Hair color, eye color, and height.
What is anatomical position?
It is a standard position which is used to describe the body.
What is the largest organ in the body?
The skin
What is crossing over?
When chromosomes transfer information between each other.
What is the difference between DNA and RNA?
DNA has two strands and RNA has only one strand.
A different form of a trait that a Gene may have are called what?
Alleles
What is Anatomy and Physiology?
Anatomy is the study of the structure of the body and their relationship to one another and Physiology is the study of the function of the body.
What is the digestive system?
The digestive system is the system that helps digest our food.
What happens in Telaphase?
When the cell begins to split into two.
What is the structure of DNA?
Double Helix
What is a dominant and recessive allele?
A Dominant Allele is the stronger variation of a gene and a Recessive Allele is the weaker variation of a gene.
What is the difference between superior and inferior?
superios is toward the head and inferior is away from the head.
What are the two main organs of the nervous system?
The brain and the spinal cord.
What is a haploid cell?
A cell that only has a single set of chromosomes
What can cause mutations?
Errors during cell division.
What does Homozygous and Heterozygous mean?
Homozygous is inheriting the same version of an allele from each parent and heterozygous is having two different versions of an allele.
What is the difference between proximal and distal?
proximal is toward the nearest point of the origin and the distal is the farthest point of the origin.
What type of cells does the bones produce?
Blood cells
What is a diploid cell?
A cell that has a full two sets of chromosomes.
Why is DNA called the blueprint of life?
it holds all the master instructions required to build, grow, and maintain an organism.
What is a punnet square.
A Punnett square is a simple grid used to predict the traits an offspring might inherit from its parents.
What is an example of anterior and posterior?
an example of anterior is the kneecap is located on the anterior side of the leg and an example of posterior is the shoulder blades are located on the posterior side of the body.
What is oxygenated blood and deoxygenated blood?
Oxygenated blood is carries the oxygen and nutrients to keep you going and deoxygenated blood is is the waste that you breath out.