The venoms are different for different species of snakes.
Examples: neurotoxins, enzymes, peptides, amines, etc.
See the link below for details.
four tyes of precipitation are rain, snow, sleet, and hail
No. Hurricane names are reused every six years.
carbonhydrogenoxygennitrogensulfurcalciumphosphorusironmagnesiumsodiumpotasiumchlorineiodineflorineetc.
Yellow
Every year they sit down and write the names in alphabetical order leaving out names of that were bad storms. They are replaced with names of four letters or more.
Snake venom is made of proteins, produced in the equivalent of our salivary gland and has been evolving for between 60-80 million years from their once simple salivary glands. There are 24 different snake venom toxins that have been characterized by scientists and most are classed into four common groups which cover most snake groups. 21 of these toxins were shown to have been originally derived from proteins normally expressed in other body tissues, including brain, eye, lung, heart, liver, muscle, mammary gland, ovary, and testis. The other three are as yet undetermined as to where they originated. Snake venom potency is measured using the Indian Cobra venom as 1, and arranging the toxicity of all other snake venom up or down from this. The Diamond Back Rattlesnake is less than 0.1 while the Inland Taipan is 50.0, making it 50 times more venomous than the Cobra and 500 times more venomous than the Rattler. The second most venomous land snake comes in at around 17.0. These proteins are a constant research base for scientists working on cures from cancer to the common cold.
if its a rattle snake then it will rattle but any other snake will hiss
The four names are soil, dirt, earth and ground.
The word "snake" has four phonemes: /s/ /n/ /e/ /k/.
Yes it has four teeths
There are no specific names for such a shape.
Adenine, guanine, cytosine, thymine.
There are a lot more than four chords but the string names are GCEA.
Yes it is. Most people believe that the inland taipan is the snake with the most toxic venom, but it is the Black Mamba.A:Not even close, as of 2010:The most venomous snake on earth is the Belcher's Sea Snake (Hydrophis Belcheri) or the Faint Banded Sea Snake, some consider the Inland Taipan (Oxyuranus microlepidotus) an/or the Beaked Sea Snake (Enhydrina schistosa) to be the most toxic, however, with recent and more accurate studies 2010 prove the Belcheri has a 100 times more toxic venom then the two above or any other snake on earth.It has a paddle-like tail, breathes air and can hold it's breath up to 8 hours, a few milligrams of venom can kill over a thousand people.It's habitat is a wide range in the South Pacific.Excluding the Belcher's Sea Snake the next most venomous snakes on earth according to their venom rating are:2- Inland Tiapan (Oxyuranus Microlepidotus).3- Common Indian Krait (Bungarus Caeruleus).4- Philippine Cobra (Naja Philippinensis).5- King Cobra (Ophiophagus Hanna).6- Russell's Viper (Vipera Russellii).7- Black Mamba (Dendroaspis Polylepis).8- Yellow Jawed Tommygoff (Bothrops Asper).9- Multibanded krait (Bungarus Multicinctus).10- Tigar Snake (Notechis Scutatus).11- Jararacussu (Bothrops Jararacussu).
Probably Claire's or Icing.
They're just four chemicals that make up the genetic 'code'.
Who his?