air, water, dirt, dust, sand
An amusement park can be compared to a nucleolus because the office of the park is the control center of the park. The nucleolus is the control center of the cell. The amusement park has a fence and that is like a cell wall.
As a Supervisor of parks for a municipality, I can answer your question. A "Passive Park" is a public area designated as a park, but does not afford facilities or equipment for exercise or play: i.e a nature park or greenspace. It can have benches or trails, but is not conducive for for any "Active" use, such as sport or play. Just reverse that and you have the definition of an "Active" park. Del Keen Supervisor of Parks Panama City, FL
the answer to your question yes there is a river through the national park called the castlereagh river .
nucleus~food court Cytoplasm~air/sidewalksgrass between rides etc. ER~buses transporting people throughout the park Cell Wall~Fence surrounding Park Cell Membrane~Main Gate Mitochondria~Power Boxes supplying the park's energy ("power Plant" of the Park) Vacuole~Maintnence Workers Chloroplasts~employees who sell food to people (giving them energy) Lysosomes~animals that eat the dropped food after the park is closed Golgi Complex~ Announing system usually playing cheesy music (sending messages throughout the park) Ribosomes~stuff in restaurants (ovens, people, etc.) nucleolus~parks restaurants (in the food court) sorry if I missed Anything!☻I !
100 squirrels
The biome of Big Bend National Park is mainly desert and arid
anything that is living in the park such as grass bugs deer weeds trees. are all biotic factors. A biotic factor is anything that is living
yes yellow stone was the first nation park
Trains
at a natinal park
300
californai
Biotic factors and abiotic factors depend on each other for survival, humans and animals alike.
on October 2, 1968.
Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho.
The main abiotic factors that affect yellow stone national park would be hot springs, water, soil, climate and rock. These all interact with biotic factors.
60-75