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A photo collage of images from the chapter. Clockwise from top left are: ringworm in skin; trypanosomes (pink ribbon-like parasites) in a smear of blood viewed under a light microscope; an electron micrograph of tree mold, showing a long, slender stalk that branches into long chains of spores that look like a string of beads; a wedge of cheese; a scanning electron micrograph of MRSA bacteria, which looks like clusters of spheres clinging to a surface; grapes with white and brown fungus; pale pink, cup-shaped fungi growing on a log; a scanning electron micrograph of corkscrew-shaped bacterium; coral fungus, a yellowish-orange fungus that grows in a cluster and is lobe-shaped.
Living things are very diverse, from simple, single-celled bacteria to complex, multicellular organisms. (credit "ringworm": modification of work by Dr. Lucille K. Georg, CDC; credit "Trypanosomes": modification of work by Dr. Myron G. Schultz, CDC; credit “tree mold”: modification of work by Janice Haney Carr, Robert Simmons, CDC; credit "coral fungus": modification of work by Cory Zanker; credit "bacterium": modification of work by Dr. David Cox, CDC; credit "cup fungus": modification of work by "icelight"/Flickr; credit "MRSA": modification of work by Janice Haney Carr, CDC; credit "moldy grapefruit": modification of work by Joseph Smilanick)

Until the late twentieth century, scientists most commonly grouped living things into five kingdoms—animals, plants, fungi, protists, and bacteria—based on several criteria, such as absence or presence of a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles, absence or presence of cell walls, multicellularity, and mode of nutrition. In the late twentieth century, the pioneering work of Carl Woese and others compared nucleotide sequences of small-subunit ribosomal RNA (SSU rRNA), which resulted in a dramatically different way to group organisms on Earth. Based on differences in the structure of cell membranes and in rRNA, Woese and his colleagues proposed that all life on Earth evolved along three lineages, called domains. The three domains are called Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya.

Two of the three domains—Bacteria and Archaea—are prokaryotic, meaning that they lack both a nucleus and true membrane-bound organelles. However, they are now considered, on the basis of membrane structure and rRNA, to be as different from each other as they are from the third domain, the Eukarya. Prokaryotes were the first inhabitants on Earth, perhaps appearing approximately 3.9 billion years ago. Today they are ubiquitous—inhabiting the harshest environments on the planet, from boiling hot springs to permanently frozen environments in Antarctica, as well as more benign environments such as compost heaps, soils, ocean waters, and the guts of animals (including humans). The Eukarya include the familiar kingdoms of animals, plants, and fungi. They also include a diverse group of kingdoms formerly grouped together as protists.

Questions & Answers

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Moses
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Fredrick Reply
the transfer of energy by a force that causes an object to be displaced; the product of the component of the force in the direction of the displacement and the magnitude of the displacement
AI-Robot
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Esther
Is the ship moving at a constant velocity?
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The full note of modern physics
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introduction to applications of nuclear physics
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zephaniah
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aluet
Show that the equal masses particles emarge from collision at right angle by making explicit used of fact that momentum is a vector quantity
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Isaac
A wave is described by the function D(x,t)=(1.6cm) sin[(1.2cm^-1(x+6.8cm/st] what are:a.Amplitude b. wavelength c. wave number d. frequency e. period f. velocity of speed.
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A body is projected upward at an angle 45° 18minutes with the horizontal with an initial speed of 40km per second. In hoe many seconds will the body reach the ground then how far from the point of projection will it strike. At what angle will the horizontal will strike
Gufraan Reply
Suppose hydrogen and oxygen are diffusing through air. A small amount of each is released simultaneously. How much time passes before the hydrogen is 1.00 s ahead of the oxygen? Such differences in arrival times are used as an analytical tool in gas chromatography.
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Nangun Reply
the science concerned with describing the interactions of energy, matter, space, and time; it is especially interested in what fundamental mechanisms underlie every phenomenon
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nuclei having the same Z and different N s
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Source:  OpenStax, Concepts of biology. OpenStax CNX. Feb 29, 2016 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11487/1.9
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