back then 3.6 billion years ago there was no oxygen but today we have many things
Lamarck hypothesized that organisms evolved through the inhertitance of acquired charactaristics.
No , because organs are only body parts of organisms.
Plants are the organisms which have roots and can crack rocks
There are a lot of different organisms the pellet .
Organisms that produce the biosphere's food supply are called producers. Producers consist of plants, trees and some unicellular organisms. All of these use photosynthesis.
That's a bit of a nonsense question. The existence of life is consistent with *any* and *every* hypothesis that tries to explain the existence of life, scientific or not. The existence of life is the very thing that the hypothesis is trying to explain, so necessarily the hypothesis assumes it and must therefore be consistent with it. The same goes for the *kind* of life we find on Earth: since any scientific hypothesis must explain the life we find here, such a hypothesis must necessarily be consistent with the life we find.
Hypothesis
The Gaia hypothesis is an example of a scientific hypothesis proposing that Earth functions as a self-regulating system, maintaining conditions necessary for life to persist. It suggests that living organisms and their inorganic surroundings have evolved as a single, self-regulating system.
There are several theories explaining the origin and evolution of viruses, including the regressive hypothesis (viruses evolved from cellular organisms), the coevolution hypothesis (viruses and host cells evolved together), and the escape hypothesis (viruses once were cellular organisms that escaped from cells). The exact origins of viruses remain a topic of ongoing research and debate in the scientific community.
The scientific term for unicellular organisms is "unicellular organisms" or "unicellular organisms."
Groups of scientific statements about the cell and the relationship between organisms and cells is call an hypothesis. An hypothesis is a proposed explanation for a phenomenon which is testable.
what is the difference between the common and scientific name of an organisms
Organisms are given a scientific name to distinguish them from other animals of similar species.
From wikipedia.org Organs exist in all higher biological organisms, in particular they are not restricted to animals, but can also be identified in plants. In single-cell organisms like bacteria, the functional analogues of organs are called organelles.
No.
Biome
BIOME