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Sorry, I cannot for the life of me remember all that organic chemistry (if only you'd asked 2 years ago!).Hmm so I managed to figure out the problem: 3-hydroxybutanal can be formed from controlled oxidation of 1,3-butanediol. Is this correct/can polyalcohols form aldehydes?
Basically, this says that the lipid bilayer is made up of phospholipids that can move around in the membrane, and that there are proteins/other things in the phospholipid bilayer that move around as well.wikipedia on the fluid mosaic model said:According to the fluid mosaic model of S. J. Singer and Garth Nicolson 1972, the biological membranes can be considered as a two-dimensional liquid where all lipid and protein molecules diffuse more or less freely.
In other words, this model said that the membrane was made of a phospholipid bilayer sandwiched between proteins. Like wikipedia says, we now know (and the fluid mosaic model also says) that there is a phospholipid bilayer, but it's not sandwiched between layers of proteins; rather, those proteins are found floating around in the bilayer.wikipedia on the davson-danielli model said:In 1935, Hugh Davson and James Danielli proposed a model of the cell membrane in which the phospholipid bilayer lay between two layers of globular protein[1]. The phosopholipid bilayer had already been proposed by Gorter and Grendel in 1925[2], but the Davson-Danielli model's flanking proteinaceous layers were novel and intended to explain Danielli's observations on the surface tension of lipid bilayers. (It is now known that the phospholipid head groups are sufficient to explain the measured surface tension[3].) The Davson-Danielli model predominated until Singer and Nicolson advanced the fluid mosaic model in 1972[4]. The fluid mosaic model expanded on the Davson-Danielli model by including transmembrane proteins, and eliminated the previously-proposed flanking protein layers that were not well-supported by experimental evidence.
Aye, I would to.I need to know some good Marine Biology books.
That's a pretty common misconception. Evolution doesn't say that humans evolved from Apes. They had a common ancestor but neither evolved from the other. It's like, your mom gives birth to you and your sister, and later, you and your sister each have your own families, neither came from the other.How much evidence is there for humans evolving from apes?
I don't want evidence for evolution in general, just humans from apes specifically.
Anything specific or general marine biology? (I.e. sharks, mollusks, ocean tides etc)I need to know some good Marine Biology books.
A bit I'd say. I read an article by frans de waal, a renowned scientist who came to our school and spoke. He talks a lot about the ethics of chimps and how there is a similar ethical system between chimps and humans. We're also very physically similar.. if I were you I'd try and find a book or ask a professor, cause you're not going to find a lot of good info on the internet. Hope that helps.How much evidence is there for humans evolving from apes?
I don't want evidence for evolution in general, just humans from apes specifically.
There you go:How much evidence is there for humans evolving from apes?
I don't want evidence for evolution in general, just humans from apes specifically.
There is, but it's not the general accepted theory. The theory says gravity or another force would contract all mass back to a single point, like how it was with the big bang.I have a question that may seem really dumb. I know their is a theory (I believe) about the universe always expanding. Well is there a theory that it will stop one day?
That is a handy little picture!