Adenine, uracil, guanine and cytosine
You can acually watch it on youtube i fould this out after 3days of looking i never thought it would be on there
I would run it at 40:1. When I first got my bike I wanted to be safe and run it at the recommended 32:1, but it was way too rich. I fould plugs like crazy.
The sequence would be GACGGT
Roy Thomas. He fould off 22 piches which brought the count up to 3-2. He would have been pitched at least 26 pitches (22 fouled, 3 balls, and one ball he put in play).
the three main reasons would probably be clogged fuel filter timing or fould plugs
Since there are 15 cytosine bases, we can conclude that there are 15 guanine bases. That gives us a total of 30 bases, subtract that from 40 and you have 10 bases left. So then there are 5 adenine bases because there are also 5 more thymine bases.
If there are 4 adenines on one side of the DNA, there will be 4 thyamines on the other side. In RNA, there would be 4 uracil's.
That would be some kind of prism. To answer the question more specifically, I would need to know the shape of the bases.
It would obviously be false
The complementary strand for bases AAGCCA would be TTCGGT. In DNA, adenine pairs with thymine and guanine pairs with cytosine.
To make 3 amino acids, you would need at least 9 bases. This is because each amino acid is encoded by a sequence of 3 bases called a codon. So, 3 amino acids would require 3 codons, which would be 9 bases in total.
Bases, I'm not sure. But all acids I would say are, seeing as they are corrosive.