burden of proof
The redshift of distant galaxies.
Conservative Democrats were losing power by 1938.
He deduced that from the law of definite proportions.
Since the Taliban has been kicked out and NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) has taken over, womens rights have definitly improved. The edvidence to prove this is that400,000 women have started school this year.seven million children are at school and 37% are female.women can now be in the military.And women with husbands that tolerate it, can show their faces, instead of always wearing a burka.
Evidence for movement and change in the geosphere over long periods of time includes the formation and movement of tectonic plates, which can lead to the creation of mountain ranges and ocean basins. Fossil records and sediment layers also provide clues to past geological events and changes in the Earth's surface. Additionally, isotopic dating methods can determine the ages of rocks and minerals, helping scientists reconstruct the history of the geosphere.
Evidence for a single supercontinent, known as Pangaea, includes matching geological formations, fossil distribution, and ancient climatic patterns found across separate continents. For example, the fit of South America and Africa, similarities in rock formations, and the distribution of certain fossils indicate that these landmasses were once connected. Additionally, findings like glacial deposits in regions that are now far from the poles suggest a different climate distribution in the past when the continents were closer together.
from my knowledge, it can be used in DNA testing in order to identify a suspect, it can be used to trace a person using this DNA, and can provide hard edvidence showing that someone was at the place of the blood, unless someone just had their transfusion lol, it can be used to do some other stuff but those are the main bits, in my opinion.
Your question is incomplete, as you imply you are going to provide a "list" of options. In any event, and while I am not a professional physicist, I believe the following are items of evidence which support the big bang theory: 1. The presence of cosmic background radiation - a low level "hum" of radiation that is more or less constant in every direction; 2. The relative fraction of Helium in the universe; 3. The fact that almost all galaxies are flying away from each other. Assuming these are correct, this list is almost certainly incomplete - there are doubtless other items of relevant evidence.
All present observational evidence supports Big Bang Cosmology, and (in some cases) rules out the Steady State Hypothesis or a Universe younger than 9000 years. This evidence includes: 1) A Hubble Expansion Constant that shows that all of our Universe being was packed into a dense state about 13.7 billion years ago. 2) An isotropic CMBR with a spectrum identical to a black-body of temperature 2.7 K -- EXACTLY as predicted. 3) A Universe of about 90% hydrogen and 10% helium -- again, as predicted. 4) Young galaxies being seen only far away from us, and old galaxies being seen only close to us. 5) No white dwarf stars being seen that are older than about 12 billion years. 6) The ratio of radioactive elements to decay products showing the former can not have existed more than about 12 billion years ago. Either "the whole Universe was in a hot, dense state; and nearly 14 billion years ago expansion started," or someone has tricked us into seeing such a Universe -- no other possibilities exist.
From Wikipedia,TaxonomyTaxonomy is the branch of biology that names and classifies all living things. Scientists use morphological and genetic similarities to assist them in categorizing life forms based on ancestral relationships. For example, orangutans, gorillas, chimpanzees, and humans all belong to the same taxonomic grouping referred to as a family - in this case the family called Hominidae. These animals are grouped together because of similarities in morphology that come from common ancestry (called homology).Strong evidence for evolution comes from the analysis of homologous structures: structures in different species that no longer perform the same task but which share a similar structure. Such is the case of the forelimbs of mammals. The forelimbs of a human, cat, whale, and bat all have strikingly similar bone structures. However, each of these four species' forelimbs performs a different task. The same bones that construct a bat's wings, which are used for flight, also construct a whale's flippers, which are used for swimming. Such a "design" makes little sense if they are unrelated and uniquely constructed for their particular tasks. The theory of evolution explains these homologous structures: all four animals shared a common ancestor, and each has undergone change over many generations. These changes in structure have produced forelimbs adapted for different tasks.