evolutionary change.
Living things have a long history in change in the environment.
evolutionary change.
evolutionary change
evolution
Adaptations.
it is called evolution
The theory says that living things have changed over time and are not static. Charles Darwin proposed a way it could have happened, namely by natural selection. For example, the finch with the larger bill is better fit in an environment with mostly nuts than the finch with the smaller bill. It was later found through technology that living things mutate so over time, the thing with slightly better mutations survives. All this detail is more specific than the theory of evolution, which just says that living things change (so evolution simply predicts change). Sorry it took to long to answer.
Yes, living things are also known as carbon-based lifeforms. This is because carbon is the base of life as we know it. Carbon can form long chains with itself and so is uniquely able to be the basis of life.
I'm not 100% sure but i believe the pollen is living
Living things don't normally stay the same as long as non living things do. Most living things will die before a mountain crumbles.
No
No
molecules containing long chains of carbon atoms are found on living things.
7 years
fossils are used to determine the history of changes in environment and organisms because to see how they lived long ago on the environment and things like that
the living thing are dinosaurs,although the scientist can prove it to be real,but i'm sure it could be.
because they r sitting there for a long time and gradually they become the same temperature because they dont hav body heat or anything else to change tht
Two important things people can learn from studying history is the grest triumphs of the past and the things that happened long ago that to not repeat again.
Most issues are based in similarity. Some long periods of history in various places see little change in things like technology, culture, demographics and hence are difficult to be divided into historical periods.
Carbon.
Long term, no. All living things are a part of the biosphere and the great cycle this encompasses. Without the other organisms that form part of this cycle, a living thing would eventually die.