I am pretty sure it was humans, but that's just me I am not sure.
dominant-appears in first generation recessive-seems to dissapear
mammals The mass extinction that occurred at the end of the Cretaceous period left a lot of empty spaces for the surviving animals to fill. Lizards and crocodilians were around, but in general, land life in the earliest millennia of the Cenozoic was sparse. No animals really replaced the dinosaurs in the early years of the Paleocene epoch, but if you're asking which of the tetrapods eventually took over, I think it's a tossup between the birds and the mammals, depending on which continent you're considering and how a many millions of years you wish to traverse. In presumptive South America and Europe, the mammals were primarily small insectivores and/or herbivores; based on the fossil evidence, none had teeth that were designed for cutting meat. The birds that survived the extinction pulses vied with the mammals for dominance and the issue swung back and forth for millennia. By the late Paleocene, in Europe and South America, huge, very obnoxious-looking birds - some as tall as 7-8 feet with huge, very aggressive bills - became the dominant meat-eaters. In Asia, this seems not to have been the case. .
For most animals, not at all. There was a theory that pigeons might be able to detect it, but that seems to be false.
hey I'm not positive but I believe that Cystic Fibrosis is autosomal. My reasonning for this is that there seems to be an equal number of females that have cystic fibrosis as there are males. I AM NOT POSITIVE.
a person who seems to be in a perpetual state of calmness is what
dominant-appears in first generation recessive-seems to dissapear
dominant
"Psychopathology" seems to be a recurrent predatory theme.
dominant-appears in first generation recessive-seems to dissapear
Not all men do. Some men prefer the female to assume the dominant role in relationships. That seems to be the major reason.
Essenes
13-14
The trait that is being masked is recessive, and the trait that is doing the masking is dominant.
mammals The mass extinction that occurred at the end of the Cretaceous period left a lot of empty spaces for the surviving animals to fill. Lizards and crocodilians were around, but in general, land life in the earliest millennia of the Cenozoic was sparse. No animals really replaced the dinosaurs in the early years of the Paleocene epoch, but if you're asking which of the tetrapods eventually took over, I think it's a tossup between the birds and the mammals, depending on which continent you're considering and how a many millions of years you wish to traverse. In presumptive South America and Europe, the mammals were primarily small insectivores and/or herbivores; based on the fossil evidence, none had teeth that were designed for cutting meat. The birds that survived the extinction pulses vied with the mammals for dominance and the issue swung back and forth for millennia. By the late Paleocene, in Europe and South America, huge, very obnoxious-looking birds - some as tall as 7-8 feet with huge, very aggressive bills - became the dominant meat-eaters. In Asia, this seems not to have been the case. .
yes they do it seems amazing but THEY DO Ellys gudger ;)
Not all men do. Some men prefer the female to assume the dominant role in relationships. That seems to be the major reason.
For most animals, not at all. There was a theory that pigeons might be able to detect it, but that seems to be false.