Impossible to answer with only the serial number and no other informaiton.
Chinese
one form of mitosis is called budding . what happens in this process
Extended Life Antifreeze which you can get at any retail locations
The most common fusion in the sun is two hydrogen atoms fusing to produce helium. There are different ways this can happen. Two deuterium atoms may fuse, or a deuterium atom may fuse with a tritium atom, or two tritium atoms may fuse. Since the half life of tritium is rather short, the overwhelming majority of these atoms are deuterium atoms. The commonest form of hydrogen, known as protium, does not take part in the process.
If you mean taking it to a recycling center i have to say.. HOW CAN YOU BE SO STUPID!?!?!?!. but if you mean making dried up playdough work again them..>i would just add a bit of water, warm it up, and work it into being soft again.
The diet for type a blood is (Agrarian) which means you should eat lots of vegtables, almost as if you were a vegetarian. If you have this type of blood you should consume and eat plenty of grains, soy protiens, alond with organic vegetables. You should also gentley excercise and not excersice excessily.
Nice ones. Ethically, boy, what a mixture. The Lake District is part of the Celtic Fringe, so there are Celts; all sorts of celts. The original population was similar to the Lowland Scots, but this is overlaid by Norse invasions; when I was a boy, shepherds used to count their sheep in Old Norse - Yan, tan, tethera, methera.... In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, mining was big in the Lake District, more espeially in West Cumberland, and miner migrated from other parts of the Celtic Fringe: Welshmen to the coal mines of Workington and Whitehaven, Cornishmen (like my Great-Grandfather) to the lead mines of the high fells. Near the West coast there is a village called Torpenhow (pronounced Trapenna, of course), and behind the village is Torpenhow Hill. This must be the most repetitive place name in the world, since Tor is Cornish for Hill, Pen is Welsh for Hill, How is Old Norse for Hill, and Hill.... Surnames in the Lake District are commonly on the Lowland Scots pattern, ending in -son: Patterson, Pattinson, Harrison, Wilson. West Cumbria has a lot of Grahams. The dialect of the Lake District is unique; all vowel sounds are different from Standard English. 'Everybody knows', for example, comes out as 'Ivribuddy knaas'. It's the mixture of Norse and Celtic that does this. Finally, there are the off-comers; middle-class holiday-home owners and retirees from all over England. But they don't count.
I don't know about ALL vampires but the vampire Count Vlad Dracula specifically can turn into a bat, and a wolf, and (this isn't an animal but whatever) a mist. Actually I watched this one movie, Dracula, and I MUST say that this is what it had to be simply because its unmistakeably, I don't quite understand what the hell exactly the filmmakers were trying to portray here but the creature the vampire turned into too looked a lot like a werewolf. In the movie Van Helsing... Dracula turns into a demonic gargoyle typle monster. The legends, tales and folklore speak about vampire-bats as the most common shape shifting for a vampire. Changing into another creatures is rarely mentioned but can be found occasionally, such as a plague of rats, a half man half bat, a white stag, are among a few to be mentioned.