I believe that you may be referring to pixels. Digital pictures are made up of (most of the time) thousands of pixels (depending on the resolution, e.g. there are more pixels in an 800x600 image than in a 640x420 image, given in length x width format). The more pixels an image has, the higher quality and the clearer the image is. Cameras are often rated by Megapixels. A Megapixel, judging from the name, is a block of 1,000,000 pixels. If a camera has 4 megapixels, then the image is essentially split into 4 parts, each containing 1,000,000 pixels for the obvious total of 4,000,000 pixels. However, if it is only 2 MP, then you have only half the pixels, and the image will be nowhere near as sharp. I hope this helped.
Proteins are the building blocks of all organisms.
an atom because everything is made up of atoms!
they are called planetesimals
in 1893 as small building blocks for toddlers of the age
The building blocks of plastics are called monomers. These are small molecules that can join together to form long chains known as polymers through a process called polymerization.
Amino acids are the building blocks that make up proteins. These small units combine together in long chains to form proteins, which carry out various functions in the body.
Carbohydrates are composed primarily of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms and range in size from small to very large.
The small particles that make up matter are called atoms. Atoms are the basic building blocks of all elements and substances in the universe.
350 and under are small blocks. There is also a 400 small block but there is a 400 large block. 396 and up are big blocks.
Proteins are broken down into amino acids. These are actually called the building blocks of proteins.
No, globular clusters are large groups of stars that formed together at the same time. They are much larger and contain thousands to millions of stars, unlike small asteroids, and were not the building blocks of planets.
Lincoln Logs, named after Abraham Lincoln (because he grew up in a log house).