Yes, indeed.
The study of organisms that are either permanent cave-dwellers or use caves as, e.g., roosts, is a one of the various sciences under the umbrella term "speleology".
Biosphere
The geosphere extends from the Earth's crust to the lower atmosphere. It includes the solid parts of the Earth, such as the rocks and minerals in the crust, mantle, and core.
Yes, a geode is considered a crystal because it is a hollow rock formation that contains crystals inside.
No, the water inside your body is not considered part of the hydrosphere. The hydrosphere refers to all the water on Earth, including oceans, rivers, lakes, and groundwater. The water in your body is part of your internal body fluids, not part of the Earth's external water system.
The smaller, the more abundant - probably, bacteria, germs, uni-celled organisms, ants, grass/weeds ... You name it!
Yes, indeed. The study of organisms that are either permanent cave-dwellers or use caves as, e.g., roosts, is a one of the various sciences under the umbrella term "speleology".
Inside the Biosphere - 1991 was released on: USA: 1991 (Arizona)
No, canker sores are not considered open wounds. They are small ulcers that occur inside the mouth and are not caused by bacteria or viruses.
Yes.
The digestive system is really just a tube that begins at your mouth and ends at the rectum. Most of it is filled with bacteria compared to the other parts of your body which are usually sterile with no bacteria.
well, the synonym for biosphere is environment, or habitat, so I guess the antonym for it might be inside you? sorry if that didn't help- I'm not sure either
They are found anywhere on the body and inside a lot of the body. If system like the respiratory tract has an outlet then it is filled with bacteria. Respiratory, reproductive and digestive systems all have these outlets. The skin has more bacteria on it than you have body cells. The only true sterile areas are the cardiovascular, nervous and immune systems.
In the biosphere: the thin upper layer of the earth's crust, earth's waters, and the lower part of earth's atmosphere.
inside
No, bacteria can not endocytosise another bacteria. bacteria contains cell wall, DNA called nucleoid and cytoplasm. Bacteria can make its own proteins by its ribosomes..No, they do not. They are not large enough for more bacteria inside.
yes it can because imagine if you were dead bacteria can eat you.
Inside or outside of what? Your colon? Your house? Your cat?