The stages of Mitosis are are interphase, prophase, prometaphase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase.
Anaphase.
If you're talking about mitosis/meiosis, anaphase comes after prophase. But your typo makes me wonder if you're saying something else...
The phase you are referring to is metaphase I. In metaphase I of meiosis, homologous pairs of chromosomes line up at the cell's equator before they are separated and pulled to opposite ends of the cell during anaphase I.
anaphase **Remember anaphase means apart
the four phases of mitosis are prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase
Before anaphase occurs, the cell undergoes metaphase during mitosis. In this stage, the chromosomes align at the cell's equatorial plane, and the spindle fibers attach to the centromeres of the chromosomes. Once all chromosomes are properly aligned and attached, the cell transitions to anaphase, where the sister chromatids are pulled apart toward opposite poles of the cell.
Anaphase lAnaphase I
Anaphase is the stage of cell division where sister chromatids separate and move towards opposite ends of the cell, pulled by the spindle fibers. Metaphase is the stage where chromosomes align at the cell's equator before they separate in anaphase.
anaphase 2
anaphase
Telophase I is the stage that takes place in meiosis before the Prophase II and after Anaphase I.
Anaphase I of meiosis is more analogous to anaphase in mitosis than anaphase II. In anaphase I, homologous chromosomes are separated and pulled to opposite poles, similar to how sister chromatids are separated during mitotic anaphase. In contrast, anaphase II involves the separation of sister chromatids, which is akin to what occurs in mitosis but happens after a reductional division in meiosis. Thus, the mechanisms and outcomes of anaphase I align more closely with those of mitosis.