Answer: c. alluvial fan.
A wide sloping deposit of sediment formed where a stream leaves a mountain range is called an alluvial fan. An alluvial fan is the deposition of sediment on a landform like mountain. It forms as an open fan or cone of sediment. The sediments are left by natural drainage system like river on the landform.
There are two types of alluvial fans.
1. Debris dominated: These includes viscous mixture of water, mud, gravel along with woody debris. This transfer large boulders of landform soil.
2. Floodwater dominated: Water will spill in the alluvial fan in the form of thin sheets. This can transfer fine particles of landform soil.
Answer:
kinetic energy
Explanation:
think of kinetic energy as basically being the energy of movement. If something is moving it has kinetic movement.
Hey there!
I'm assuming it's pointing to the wall in between the two sections of the heart.
We can go over the function of the blue section and red section of the heart. Though I must admit I am not well versed with hearts of birds, I will assume this is similar to a human one. The blue section <u>receives blood from the body which doesn't have any oxygen left in it,</u> and the red section <u>receives blood from the lungs, newly oxygenated.</u> This sector in between separates these two sections, and separates oxygen-poor blood and oxygen-rich blood.
Thus, your answer is option D.
Hope this helps, feel free to let me know if you have any additional questions about this specific problem!
Do you know if there is just 1 answer? I think it is both the left atrium and right atrium.
If just 1 answer, try right atrium
<span>The essential unit of DNA packaging is the nucleosome. A nucleosome consists of a small amount of DNA wrapped up with protein. The proteins that interact with DNA to form chromatin comprise a family of basic (positively charged) proteins called histones. There are five different types of histone protein: H1, H2A, H2B, H3, and H4. Of these, two molecules each of H2A, H2B, H3, and H4 combine to form a histone octamer. DNA wraps around the octamer, making 1 3/4 turns around the protein complex. The amount of DNA associated with the histone octamer is 146 bp. The octamer plus the DNA comprise what is called the nucleosome core. A small stretch of DNA (60 bp) runs between adjacent nucleosome cores, and is known as the linker. A single nucleosome consists of one core plus a linker. The total amount of DNA involved in a single nucleosome is approximately 206 bp. Chromatin therefore consists of DNA wrapped around one histone octamer after another, like a long string of beads.</span>