No, the opposite would happen. The two bodies would be repelled.
if there were no Golgi bodies then the food could not be stored any where
it would make our teeth rot and it is most centennially not good for our bodies because it slows us down and it makes our teeth have a lot f microorganism!
if all charged bodies repel, the earth's weather and natural phenomena wouldn't exist.
of all the minor bodies of the solar system, the largest fragments of rock are called asteroids, so yeah. Of course, we have the "dwarf planets" now. They would be the answer, if you call them minor bodies
The ancient Egyptians did not mummify their gods but the bodies of their dead.
The ancient Egyptians used many stages to mummify bodies once the person had died they would cover them in a substance that would dry there skin out.
Egyptian myth does not relate how it was done only that Anubis did it with the aid of Isis to revive Osiris; the priests of ancinet Egypt likely already knew a process to mummify bodies of the dead. Thus that process became a part of religion.
They are called Embalmers.
Mostly to hide the bodies from thieves. (When they died they would have their riches with them)
Embalmers mummifies the dead bodies.
They mummified there body to preserve them.
To preserve the bodies for use in the afterlife Also to keep the bodies clean.
the priests are in charge of mummification because they have learnt how to mummify the dead body of a pharoah or noble from father to son. They are also in charge because they have the gifted talents from the gods and goddess of egypt so the priests can replace anubis the god of mummification. (unfortunetly priestess cant mummify)
to preserve respected ones e.g king tuts and so that the bodies could go into the afterlife
Ancient Egyptians mummify important peoples bodies because they thought that the person will need their bodies for the afterlife. They thought without the body, that person's soul would have no where to go.
The Ancient Egyptians strongly believed in an afterlife, that's why they tried to preserve the bodies as well as they could so that the deceased could survive in the afterlife.