The reason why zoology differs from other biological sciences is because ZOOLOGY is the study of animals and everything about it.
Yes you can but you have to find a university that says in it's entry requirements that they'll accept applicants with a Bsc in zoology or other life sciences.
They learn and study religious sciences and other natural, physical, biological, and social sciences.
All sciences use the basics of chemistry to get started. Biology, Zoology, botany, and medical sciences use chemistry in them along with electrical engineering that needs to make currents.
Different sciences contained under the broad concept of biology include: Zoology, Marine Biology, Botany, Physiology, Psychology, Bacteriology, Ornithology, etc. In other words: any science having to do with living organisms.
These are the meanings I found on dictionary.com the science or branch of biology dealing with animals. a treatise on zoology. the animal life of a particular region. I hope this helped :)
No, they differ in biological activity because a specific arrangement of atoms in a specific enantiomer may react with a particular enantiomer of another compound present in biological systems while other does not.
Uniquely so seems appropriate. Biology, anatomy, zoology, pathology and so on are sub disciplines of this subject which deals with living beings. Such as plants, animals, and fungi.
The study of bread mold would fall into the Life Sciences, because it entails the study of living things (in this case, a mold). biology and zoology are examples of Life Sciences. The Earth Sciences study the mechanisms of Earth (and other planets); two examples of Earth Sciences are geology and atmospheric sciences. The Physical Sciences explain phenomena that result from the physical interactions between objects, particles, and energy. Two examples of physical sciences are physics and chemistry.
Nothing. ^ (Zoology is the study of animals... you talk about the animals teeth in Zoology but besides that Zoology is basic animal anatomy, habitats, and other animal relations)
The relationship between ethics and biological sciences is an extremely important one. In any science a person needs to know and understand how important it is to be ethically responsible. Without ethics a person of science, or any other field, would be willing and able to be inhumane to people and animals alike.
The main branches are the physical sciences and the biological sciences. The physical sciences deal with the natural world we are in, while the biological sciences deal with living organisms. What they have in common is the scientific approach, which makes observations and measurements, forms theories and tests them against the observational evidence. Scientific theories (other than in mathematics) are not provable and a physical theory is judged by its ability to predict what will happen in particular circumstances when compared with observations. All theories can be replaced by better ones if and when they are discovered.
Besides Physical Sciences, there are 3 other branches of science. These are Social Sciences, Formal Sciences and Applied Sciences.