DNA & the Double Helix
Inheritance & Predictions
Natural Selection & Isolation
Evidence for Evolution
Genetic Technologies & Ethics
100

The molecule located in the nucleus that contains the genetic code for all living organisms, shaped like a twisted ladder.

What is DNA (Deoxyribonucleic Acid)?

100

The observable physical traits or characteristics of an organism, such as eye colour or height.

What is a phenotype?

100

The process by which organisms with traits better suited to their environment are more likely to survive, reproduce, and pass on their genes.

What is natural selection?

100

The preserved remains, impressions, or traces of ancient organisms typically found embedded within sedimentary rock layers.

What are fossils?

100

The abbreviation for any plant or animal whose genetic material has been altered or modified using genetic engineering techniques.

What is a GMO (Genetically Modified Organism)?

200

A specific segment of DNA that codes for a particular protein or heritable characteristic.

What is a gene?

200

The unique combination of alleles an organism inherits for a specific gene (e.g., BB, Bb, or bb).

What is a genotype?

200

An environmental factor, such as a predator, disease, or climate change, that affects an organism’s chance of survival and drives evolution.

What is a selection pressure?

200

Features in different species that share a similar basic bone structure because they evolved from a common ancestor, like a whale's flipper and a human arm.

What are homologous structures?

200

An emerging gene-editing technology that allows scientists to act as "molecular scissors" to precisely cut, insert, or alter specific DNA sequences.

What is CRISPR (or CRISPR-Cas9)?

300

The tightly coiled, thread-like structures made of DNA and proteins; humans typically have 46 of these in their somatic cells.

What are chromosomes?

300

A grid diagram used by geneticists to model gene crosses and predict the probability of traits in offspring.

What is a Punnett square?

300

Any inherited structural, physiological, or behavioral feature that helps an organism survive in its specific environment.

What is an adaptation?

300

Biological features in different species that serve the same function but evolved independently, rather than from a shared ancestor.

What are Analogous stuructures?

300

The biotechnology process used to create an exact, genetically identical copy of a single gene, cell, or whole organism.

What is cloning?

400

The scientific term used to describe the entire, complete set of genetic material or DNA present in an organism.

What is a genome?

400

This type of allele will completely hide or mask the expression of a recessive allele when present in a heterozygous pair.

What is a dominant allele?

400

This occurs when a population is split by a physical barrier like a mountain range or ocean, preventing gene flow between the groups.

What is geographic isolation?

400

The geological law stating that in an undisturbed sequence of rocks, the oldest layers are at the bottom and the youngest are at the top.

What is the Law of Superposition?

400

Medical testing used to identify changes or mutations in a person's DNA to diagnose heritable diseases like cystic fibrosis or Huntington's disease.

What is genetic testing (or genetic screening)?

500

The Sequence of three consecutive DNA or RNA nucleotides that coresponds to a specific amino acid or signals the start or end of protein sythesis

What is a codon?

500

A diagrammatic family tree used in genetics to track the inheritance patterns of a specific trait or condition across multiple generations.

What is a pedigree chart (or pedigree)?

500

The evolutionary process by which new, distinct biological species arise from existing ones, often due to isolation and selection.

What is speciation?

500

Anatomical structures that have lost all or most of their original function through evolution, such as the human appendix or pelvic bones in whales.

What are vestigial structures?

500

Arguments regarding privacy of genetic data, potential discrimination by employers/insurers, and the concept of "designer babies" fall under this category of concern.

What are ethical (and social) implications?