So there is something known as CAS-9 or Crispr. Its actually been getting a lot of attention lately because of how it works and its potential uses.
When we look at DNA, it must be very precise. One messup and it can cause huge problems.
If an organism was to contract a virus, the virus would try and make its own DNA to infect other cells.
However, if the organism somehow beats the virus, it stores a copy of the DNA structure of that virus in Crispr.
CAS-9 will then search through every strand of DNA and will get rid of any DNA that exactly matches that one piece they have copied.
This answer goes in depth buts it very interesting actually and it is gaining lots of attention.
Answer:
landmarkes
Explanation:
i took a test abt it last year and i got it right
Answer:
I think the answer is not building towns near the edge of a tectonic plate?
Explanation:
Hope this helps!! :)
This study lacks generalizability.
Generalizability is an academic term and describes the process of extending research findings and observations from a study on a sample population to a larger and more diverse population. The larger the sample population, the easier will be to generalize the results to the wider population. In this example, Dr Kirch used a sampling technique called convenience sampling, which involves the selection of the most available and proximate subjects. However, there is sampling bias since the sampling population is not representative of the entire population and therefore the study can not speak for the entire population.