Want this question answered?
inspector
Geography ..APLUS
environmental theory
The simplest way to explain this is to first have a look at the parts of our DNA that DO have known functions. Logically we can assume that if a section of DNA that has an important function then we don't want the sequence of that region to vary much, otherwise the encoded instructions would get scrambled and the DNA would lose it's function - often leading to disease. For example, pretty much everyone has the same DNA sequence to produce hemoglobin (the oxygen carrying protein in your blood) since every single human needs it to be functional in exactly the same way. Now DNA fingerprinting is only useful if it examines regions of our genome that DO vary a lot between individuals, and hence these regions tend not to be those that encode essential functions.
Spatial perspective
A person that examines fingerprints.
NVR (Nuclear Magnetic Resonance) Spectroscopy is a research technique that examines the magnet properties of atomic nuclear material. It's mainly used by chemists and biochemists.
Cuts open and examines
A biological anthropologist would typically examine human remains found at archaeological sites. They study aspects like biological variation, health, and behavior of past populations by analyzing bones and teeth.
No it also examines the batmobile and robins cape
Physical Anthropology includes subfields such as primatology, human evolution, bioarchaeology, forensic anthropology, and human variation. Primatology focuses on the study of primates, human evolution examines the evolutionary history of humans, bioarchaeology studies human remains from archaeological sites, forensic anthropology applies anthropological methods in legal investigations, and human variation examines the biological diversity among human populations.
A carotid ultrasound examines the structure of the carotid arteries. A carotid ultrasound is used to test for blocked carotid arteries which could result in a stroke.
vets
critics
It is an auditor.
Sociocultural anthropology focuses on studying contemporary human societies with an emphasis on understanding the diversity of cultures and social practices, but physical anthropology primarily examines human biological evolution and variation.
Vocabulary examines the words you use when addressing different audiences.