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Spontaneous generation is when organisms created by matter... for example old rotten food creating larvas and flies.

biogenesis is the organisms created by other living creatures like flies reproducing to create larvas

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16y ago

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How did Pasteur's experiment differ from spallanzanis experiment?

Pasteur's experiment refuted the theory of spontaneous generation by demonstrating that microorganisms in broth were killed by heat and could only enter through the air. Spallanzani's experiment involved boiling broth in sealed flasks to prevent microorganism entry, concluding that the lack of spontaneous generation was due to the lack of vital force rather than the absence of air.


How did Louis Pasteur experiment differ from lazzaro spallanzani experiment?

Instead of sealing the flask in the experimental group after boiling, Pasteur used a flask with a curved neck, which allowed air inside and outside the flask to mix but prevented microorganisms from entering the body of the flask.


How do traits differ from one generation to the next?

Genetic traits differ from one generation to the next because the next generation has genes from both parents, unless of course you are talking about a clone. Also, the genetics of the next generation can be from recessive traits of the parents.


What is the reverse of a spontaneous reaction, and how does it differ from a nonspontaneous reaction?

The reverse of a spontaneous reaction is a nonspontaneous reaction. In a spontaneous reaction, the reaction occurs naturally without any external influence, while in a nonspontaneous reaction, external energy input is required for the reaction to occur.


Which generation of computer used LSI?

probably fourth, but after third people tend to differ on generation definitions.


When people belong to different cohorts they differ in?

When people belong to different cohorts, they differ in terms of the time period in which they were born and the events and cultural influences that shaped their formative years. This can lead to differences in values, beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors across cohorts.


How do scientific theries differ from scientific laws?

Theories are observations held to be true based on their application to observation and proven scientific laws.


Why is it best for scientific to use the scientific name of an organism instead of a common name?

Scientific names never differ among scientists.


How does a scientific theory differ from an idea?

This a Study Island Question. The answer is "Scientific Theories are supported by evidence or data."


What two scientific reasonings differ?

1. you can change the word


Can or has life ever come spontaneously from non living stuff?

You obviously are confusing spontaneous generation with abiogenesis and have an agenda bias.Ever since the synthesis of urea in the early 19th century we have know that life is a physio-chemical process and there is no divide, except to essentialist, between life and nonlife. In point of fact to ask such a question is ill posed.Comment:There is no agenda in the Bible category as they are not the words of any man. No related question in this category is 'ill posed' - begging to differ with you here.definition (now seemingly archaic): spontaneous generation,the hypothetical process by which living organisms develop from nonliving matter (Britannica Ency)Wikipedia - shortened but you will see the drift: Classical notions of abiogenesis, now more precisely known as spontaneous generation,This Wiki states was prevalent in Western thought in 19th Century - hence the 'Age of Englightenment and Evolution category inclusion - no agenda here, I'm sure of it.


What is scientific theories differ from scientific laws?

you in a science class with a woman as your teacher and her name starts with c to m