All it was asking was where is there more nitrogenous wastes - the collecting tubule contains the most because products of the kidney and osmoregulation all end up there
There's another thread for this, but anyway
that was a Beadle and Tatum experiment
The irradiation destroyed the gene that was responsible for the synthesis of that particular amino acid (which is a protein) that the mould thrived on
The added amino acid in the other test tube acted as a control
That question sucked. First I got confused and wrote about meiosis, read the qs again and had to cross it all out
I wrote about the importance of correct DNA replication, mutations and mutagens, and then how it contributes to variation in populations and evolution... then I put some stuff about...
Carriers can also refer to heterozygous dominant genotype (in this case, carrying the recessive gene but not expressing it, allowing it to be passed on to the next generation)
Re: General Thoughts: Biology
You're not crazy, DNA polymerase is the enzyme in DNA replication
Catalase is the enzyme in liver (and potatoes)
as for me... I wrote catalase and confused myself later on, crossed it out and wrote amylase
It was B because all of the other answers involve a change that the plant can't possible make in one day (the question did specify 'a hot day'). It can't grow leaves or w/e and it can't decrease the number of stomata that are present
I asked some people in my class and they weren't able to finish it either, so that made me feel a little better hehe...
I'm just worried my essay was too basic/not analytic enough
Apparently the teacher of one of the Standard classes at my school guessed the time theme, but I didn't expect it all all
Also, the supervisors at my school wasted half our reading time saying prayers and explaining the freaking paper URGH
Section 1 was okay, I liked the two memoir excerpts but the book cover.... *shudder*
and not to mention the poem..
Section 2 I spent waaaay too long on, trying to adapt my story to the stimulus without diminishing the central idea.
Section 3 My response was a bit more basic than I'd prepared...
Sorry if this has been answered before, I'm not really sure where to post this.
If my internal ranking isn't very high (ranging from 2nd to 6th depending on subject) but I do really well on my actual HSC exams, how likely is it that I can achieve Band 6s in my subjects?
On the Board of Studies...
But if you do well in ALL subjects, your wasting your time taking 12 units. If you're an all-rounder with good ranking in all subjects, dropping one that you don't need or don't enjoy will give you more time and less stress when it comes to exams and the HSC.
Most people take 12 units to back...