Chapter 1&2, & Labs
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
100

Both a body of knowledge (data) about the world and an evidence-based process for acquiring that knowledge.

What is science?

100

The substance that undergoes a chemical change.

Reactants

100

The part of the cell that contains chromosomes made of protein and DNA.

What is the nucleus?

100

Asexual reproduction in eukaryotic cells.

What is mitosis?

100

A small region of the DNA on a chromosome coding for a genetic trait.

What is a gene?

200

The metric units for mass.

What are grams?

200

They are not polymers, but they are made up of hydrocarbons, fatty acids, and/or glycerol.

What are lipids?

200

A word used to describe an animal cell when it is put into a solution that is isotonic to the cell's interior?

What is normal?
200

The phase of mitosis in which the replicated chromosomes condense and attach to the mitotic spindle, and the nuclear envelope breaks down.

What is prophase?

200

The phenotype of the offspring when a true bred purple plant fertilizes a true-bred white plant. (Purple is dominant.) 

What is purple?

300

Scientific-sounding statements, beliefs, or practices that are not based on the scientific method.

What is pseudoscience?

300

The type of bonds that connect all the carbon atoms in carbohydrates. 

covalent

300

Evidence for this theory includes common DNA structure, cell shape & size, and double membrane in all living things.

What is endosymbiotic theory?

300

A synthetic chemical found in plastics that mimics estrogen and has been found to disrupt the process of meiosis in mice, causing problems such as cancer and birth defects.

What is BPA?

300

Color-blindness, albinism, and sickle cell disease are examples of this, because they are controlled by a single gene, and unaffected by environmental conditions.

What are Mendelian traits?

400

On a microscope, the measure of image clarity.

What is resolving power?

400

The first of the 4 levels of protein structure.

What is a chain of amino acids?
400

The three things that a plant cell has but an animal cell doesn't have.

What are a large central vacuole, chloroplasts, and a cell wall. 

400
In a zygote, each one of these consists of a chromosome from each biological parent.

What is a homologous pair?

400

The organisms involved in the first cross.

What is the p generation?

500
Let's say we have a pair of homologous chromosomes. One of them has the dominant alleles of the genes for albinism and sickle cell anemia (AS) and the other one has the recessive alleles for albinism and sickle cell anemia (as.) When this process occurs during meiosis I, it causes 2 of the 4 gametes that result after meiosis to have combinations of alleles that are different from those of the parent cells (As and aS).  

What is crossing over?

500

The number of times more basic a solution of pH 10 is compared to a solution of pH 8.

What is 100 times?

500

In some organisms, this process is a way of eating. In others, it happens when white blood cells remove bacteria and cell debris from the blood, by forming a pseudopodium from the plasma membrane.

What is phagocytosis?

500

This process describes something that happens in metaphase I, when each homologous chromosome pair orients itself at the metaphase plate. They don't always line up the same way, which is one reason why the daughter cells come out different at the end.

What is independent assortment?

500

A species of monkey has either 4 fingers or 5 fingers. 4 fingers is dominant. What is the ratio of 4-fingered to 5-fingered offspring in a cross between a monkey that is heterozygous for this trait and a monkey that has 5 fingers? 

What is 1:1?