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Things like height, weight, metabolism, activity level, age, etc.
My best answer is because...you get bigger so your body parts start to function and gets bigger or smaller to.
At birth, the head and structures within it, such as the eyes and brain, are more developed in proportion to the rest of the body. The head and eyes increase in width by only 1.5 times up to the age of 5 years, and after that only a very small proportion more until early adulthood. So the eyes do grow slightly, probably only a matter of millimetres, and only up to age 5 or so.
yes
Knowing the size of different age groups is very important. The proportion of the population and gender that is in the reproductive range helps predict the size of future populations. Resources can be planned.
yes the body proportions change as you are growing older.
In RuneScape the size of any body part does not change with age. Even the size of the body does not change.
The three types of age structures are: young-age structure (high proportion of young individuals), stationary age structure (relatively equal proportion of individuals across age groups), and old-age structure (high proportion of older individuals).
Hopefully your body has finished to change (after puberty) at the age of eighteen. Look puberty for more, I guess
fat stores up
Florida had the highest proportion of people age 65 and over in 2002.
Your hormones and the chemicals that your body produces naturally, change with age. This causes your needs for different nutrients to differ with age
Florida
Puberty goes on until age 18-20 and does not grow after puberty. It will change because of age but not grow.
Delayed shifting is because the transmission fluid is not warm enough to move through the internals of the transmission. You may need a transmission service,,,,,fluid change, new filter, etc. Transmission Fluid degrades with age.
Transmission fluid changes cost so much because of the location of where the fluid will be changed. Also because, like many cars this car may require a special type of transmission fluid based on its age and mileage.
the horse head weigh as much as 11.5 or 26 in proportion its body weight..