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Sometimes a fossil is formed when the organic matter is impressed in clay or some similar substance. The organic substance rots away, but the impression it left remains, and if the clay which holds the impression petrifies, it becomes a fossil.
No. At one time yes. It must be very old. Definition of fossil per www.dictionary.com: any remains, impression, or trace of a living thing of a former geologic age, as a skeleton, footprint, etc.
A cast fossil is formed when minerals fill in an impression left by an organism.
Generalization refers to the spread of effects (perhaps from a treatment, or intervention). Stimulus generalization occurs when the same response occurs but under a different, setting, condition, or for a different therapist or parent perhaps (i.e., different stimuli). Response generalization occurs when the individual emits a different response which serves the same function as previously reinforced responses, the setting (i.e., stimulus) remains unaltered. For instance a friend might teach you how to do the Konami code (up, up, down, down, left, right, left right, b, a, start) on an old Nintendo controller. Later you perform the code on the same game (same stimulus conditions) but using joystick controller.
Fossils (from Latin fossus, literally "having been dug up") are the preserved remains or traces of animals, plants, and other organisms from the remote past. The totality of fossils, both discovered and undiscovered, and their placement in fossiliferous (fossil-containing) rock formations and sedimentary layers (strata) is known as the fossil record. Fossil are bones of extinct creatures that are said to live thousands of years ago. A fossil is the ancient remains of animals, plants and other organisms from the distant past. The word is from a Latin word 'fossus' which means 'dug up'.
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That would be a fossil.
A fossil is any remains,impression, or trace of a living thing of a former geologic age, as a skeleton or footprint.
noFossils can form when the remains of an organism decay. ... When a dead organismis buried, it often decayscompletely, leaving only an impression in the rock in a formof a hollow mold. The hard parts are most likely to leave an impression, although sometimes so can soft parts.
An object at rest remains in rest, or an object in motion remains in motion unless acted upon by an unbalanced force.
Sometimes a fossil is formed when the organic matter is impressed in clay or some similar substance. The organic substance rots away, but the impression it left remains, and if the clay which holds the impression petrifies, it becomes a fossil.
apply conservation of momentum theory- m1v1=m2v2 where m1 is the initial mass, m2 is the final mass, v1 is the initial velocity and v2 is the final velocity.
Fluid that it attracted to a nearby surface and remains attached even when the surface curves away from the initial flow direction.
We still don't know what colors dinosaurs were. The pigments of their skin long ago leached out of their remains.
The production budget for this film was never released by the studio and remains unknown. It did gross $4,557,214 in it's initial release.
-- the initial horizontal speed of the projectile -- the time it remains in flight before it hits the ground
1. The All-or-None Law states that the impulse is independent of the properties of the stimulus which started it. As long as the nerve cell is stimulated by an impulse of a certain minimal strength, it makes no difference how strong the exciting impulse is - just as a match or a blowtorch produces the same reaction in a fuse. It either fires or does not and there are no shades in between. The nerve impulse remains at the same strength as it travels along the nerve fiber, just as the spark remains at the same intensity as it moves along the fuse. The reason for this is evident in what has been said about a stimulus releasing energy in the fiber. It does not contribute energy.Impulse size and speed: The nerve impulse varies with the size of the fiber. (It is proportional to the square of the fiber's diameter.The size of the nerve impulse also depends on the condition of the fiber - being altered if drugged, deprived of oxygen, fatigued or in an abnormal state.2. The Frequency Principle states that there are more impulses per second with the stronger stimulus than with the weaker stimulus. A stronger stimulus produces impulses more frequently than the weaker stimulus. The frequency of nerve impulses is thus a function of the intensity of the stimulus.