The dense area in a eukaryotic cell that contains nucleic acid is the nucleus.
nucleus
Cytoplasm
nucleolus
DNA
Nucleus
Nucleus
Villi (singular villus) are finger-like structures that are found on the inner wall of small intestines. Villi function to absorb glucose, amino acids and water soluble vitamins by diffusion into the blood capillaries in the villi.
They are both esters. Triglycerides have three fatty acids and one glycerol, while phospholipids have two fatty acids and one glycophosphate.
The carpet is made of material that spreads the shock across the surface area of a greater distance than concrete. Concrete is more dense than carpet making it susceptible.
An educated guess would be yes They used to build ships from it. But I suppose it all depends on how large the amount of wood is, if the wood is treated i.e with some sort of varnish to stop it absorbing water and the surface area of wood as well. Hope this helps as I was wondering myself for a while
In a eukaryotic cell, the dense area that contains nucleic acids is the nucleus.
nucleus
Nucleus
Nucleus
nucleus
Nucleus
Nucleus
The dense area of the nucleus is called the nucleolus. The nucleolus consists of nucleic acids and proteins and takes part in the formation of ribosomes.
It is found in the nucleus! That is where all DNA and information of the cell is stored.
the nucleus contains the nucleolus and chromosomes. the nucleolus is just a ball of proteins and nucleic acids. it doesn't contain anything else and im pretty sure the only function is to hold spare nucleic acids for the production of RNA
No, DNA and the nucleolus are not the same thing. DNA is a nucleic acid which contains the instructions for the processes of the cell. The nucleolus is the area within the nucleus of a cell that is responsible for transcribing and assembling rRNA (ribosomal RNA). rRNA forms part of the ribosomes - which are responsible for protein synthesis.
Crest, and the least dense the Trough