it's pretty much a steel table with wheel and drains on the sides. If you want a better look watch CSI for 10 mins and you'll c one
Drugs like fentanyl analogs, synthetic cannabinoids, and some newer designer drugs may be difficult to detect in routine toxicology screens during an autopsy if specific tests are not conducted for them. These substances are constantly evolving and can be synthesized to evade traditional testing methods. Additionally, volatile substances like certain inhalants may not leave detectable traces in the body by the time of autopsy.
The periodic table is like a giant puzzle that shows all the different types of building blocks, called elements, that make up everything in the world. Each element has its own special properties and is organized on the table in rows and columns to help us understand how they are related to each other. It's like a blueprint that scientists use to study and learn more about these elements.
You can find non-metals on the right side of the periodic table, in the p-block elements. They include elements like carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, and others. Non-metals generally have properties like being poor conductors of heat and electricity, and are more likely to gain electrons in reactions.
To determine the number of valence electrons, you look at the group number of an element on the periodic table.
It looks the same as it did when Mendeleev created it. There are no changes made to the table throughout the years because Mendeleev had predicted the correct placement for all of our current known elements.
Autopsy reports are type-out pages usually consisting of about 3 pages. The report starts out with a summary and then goes into details of the person.
Virtual autopsy, aka post-mortem-imaging is performed around the world to reduce the need for a standard autopsy, but also to add precision in the reporting and preparing the standard autopsy. For solutions see for example Sectra Visualization Table, http://www.sectra.com/medical/radiology_it/offering/visualization_table/forensics/index.html
In maths a table is like a graph
it is a table with 8 sides like a HEXAGON.
Like table with no chairs
look at the peridodic table.
It will probably look like a table of figures.
shiny
an s
A repeating pattern
A repeating pattern
for example: 8x8=64