This type of rock is formed when lava cools. Examples include basalt and pumice.
What is igneous?
These are simple cells. They do not have a nucleus or membrane bound organelles.
What are prokaryotes?
This is the scientific name for the hip bone
This is the tube that connects the mouth to the stomach.
What is the esophagus?
This law is called the lazy law.
This type of rock is formed by compacting layers of sediment. Examples include sandstone and limestone.
What is sedimentary?
What are vacuoles?
This is where blood cells are made.
What is red bone marrow?
What is peristalsis?
This law explains why someone continues to move forward when the car they are traveling in makes a hard stop.
What is Newton's first law?
This type of rock is formed deep within the earth when rocks change with heat and pressure. Examples include marble and gneiss.
What is metamorphic rock?
This is the hard outer part of the bone that a doctor would need a saw to cut through.
What is compact bone?
What is mastication?
This law explains that an object with more mass will require more force to move.
What is Newton's 2nd law?
What is folliated?
Water will move by osmosis into the cell IF the cell is what compared to the outside of the cell?
What is hypertonic?
This is the squishy cushion tissue between long bones to keep them from grinding.
What is cartilage?
The small intestine has villi and microvilli to aid in the absorption of nutrients. What do all of these additional folds do for digestion?
What is inertia in motion?
These are called Minnesota's Gems. They are often found along the North Shore where they were formed in air pockets of cooled igneous rock through a variety of chemical processes.
What are agates?
This is the liquid-jelly inside of a cell.
What is cytoplasm?
This is the type of cells that build new bone.
What are osteoblasts?
What is the term for the sloshy mix of food and gastric juice that leaves the stomach and enters the small intestine?
What is chyme?
What is Newton's 3rd law.