Camelot, Narnia, Hogwarts, and Jedi
1) Eubacteria 2) Archaeabacteria 3) Protista 4) Fungi 5) Plantae 6) Animalia
It is about trade
There are six Kingdoms: Animalia, Archaea, Bacteria, Fungi, Plantae, and Protista.
well because king narmer united the lower and upper egypet
There are 2 domains (The catagorys above Kingdom) that contain Prokaryotes. They are Bacteria and Archea. I guess Bacterial could be a kingdom. But the other 4 (Plant, animal, fingi, and protists) consist of Eukaryote cells. :)
i am doing a project on the 6 kingdomes and i found out they are not its only 1 out of about 14 already discovered archea so its not the only type
Just remember the five kingdomes its part of witch one . So its part of number five (kingdoms).Its part of the animal kingdom. Its an living organisms that is part of the nuclei.
Because all of these cells require proteins, and due to this necessity it was one of the earliest organelles to evolve, likely before each separated into their own separate kingdomes.
John Thornborough has written: 'A discourse plainely prouing the euident vtilitie and vrgent necessitie of the desired happie vnion of the two famous kingdomes of England and Scotland' -- subject(s): Early works to 1800, Foreign relations, History
No, fungi are not able to undergo photosynthesis like plants to produce their own sugar. Instead, they obtain nutrients by breaking down organic matter in their environment through the process of decomposition.
He didn't - as far as he was concerned there was only his one kingdom. After his death, his generals fought over the spoils and created their own kingdoms. We call these kingdoms today Hellenistic because the local cultures of these kingdoms were merged with Hellenic (Greek) culture and civilization creating a fusion of the two - which is why we use Hellenistic (like Greek) rather then Hellenic (Greek).
Richard Meggott has written: 'The new-cured criple's caveat, or, England's duty for the miraculous mercy of the King's and kingdomes restauration' -- subject(s): English Sermons 'A sermon preached at White-Hall in Lent, March the 16. 1682/3' 'A sermon preached at St. Martins in the Fields, at the funeral of the Reverend Doctor Hardy, Dean of Rochester, June 9th, 1670' -- subject(s): English Sermons, Funeral sermons, Sermons