No, ctyokinesis is.
No, anaphase is the stage of cell division when the chromosomes are pulled and pushed apart and head to opposite polls of the cell. Infact Anaphase is the stage of nuclear division rather than cell division and cell division is achieved by cytokinesis which may be by cell plate formation (as in case of many plants) or by furrowing (as in case of animal cells).
In animal cells, cytokinesis occurs by a process called cleavage. The first sign of cleavage is the appearance of of a Cleavage furrow.
Anaphase
In Anaphase I
cleavage->gastrulation->implantation->formation of placenta->first labor
Prophase: The condensation of chromosomes; the nuclear membrane disappears; formation of the spindle apparatus; chromosomes attach to spindle fibers.
The answer is Cleavage because Cleavage is the first mitotic divisions of the zygote. There is an increase in the number of cells but a decrease in size of the individual cells.
There is no stage between metaphase and anaphase. Mitosis has four stages, first its prophase then metaphase then anaphase then telophase.
The process described in your question is called anaphase. One can remember this step of the cell cycle easily because the chromosomes form 'A' shapes at the ends of the poles- and 'A' is of course the first letter of anaphase. The next step in the cell cycle is telophase- where the cell undergoes cytokinesis- splitting to form two new cells.
PMATProphase Metaphase Anaphase TelophasePMATProcess MaturityPMATPortable Maintenance Access TerminalPMATPure Mathematics (course)PMATProduct Management and Account Team (Sprint)PMATProgram Management Assistance TeamPMATPrimary Mental Abilities Test (cognitive evaluation)PMATPrograms Management Analytics & Technologiesprophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telephase.PMAT refers to the four stages of mitosis: Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase, and Telophase.Prophase is the first stage of mitosis. Replicated chromosomes condense and the nuclear envelope breaks down. In animal cells, centrioles form spindle fibers while moving towards the poles. In plant cells, spindle fibers also form, though their origin is unknown as plants do not have centrioles.During metaphase (the second stage), chromosomes line up at the center of the cell (the cell equator). Spindle fibers attach to the centromeres, the centers of sister chromatid pairs.During anaphase (the third stage), sister chromatids are pulled away from each other to opposite ends of the cell by the spindle fibers.During telophase (the fourth stage), nuclear envelopes reform around the chromosomes which subsequently uncoil. In addition, the spindle fibers disappear. Finally, in an animal cell, the cell is divided in two by the formation of a cleavage furrow at the center of the cell where the plasma membrane pinches inward. In plant cells, a cell plate is formed along the center of the cell; this cell plate grows until it touches the cell wall, dividing the cell in two.
During the first stage of anaphase the kinetochore microtubules retract pulling the two sister chromatids apart towards the poles. During the second stage of anaphase the mitotic poles that is mared by the centrosomes themselves separate by the elongation of a specific type of non-kinetochore microtubule called as the polar microtubule.
The first fossil appears at the desert the second appears in mirage tower.