Recently and i was, i only know i mendels laws of heredity. And who has he . Something about genetic. This is genetics in it. And then then yeah. Okay. Yes, of course. Yeah. Why dont we, why he was on the one been in the beginning genetics. Yeah, he was among for all those still racking their brains will look at why his discoveries are so important and why schools still teach mendels laws today. Welcome to to morrow to day. The science show on t w Gregor Mendel was indeed a monk. In 1843, he joined a monastery in a town now known as burne know in the czech republic. He became intrigued by the peas growing in the monasteries garden. They had purple, white and pink flower. The pods were different colors to some piece around others wrinkled. How can there be so many variations . He wonder . He began cross breeding the peas producing more than 28000. 00 plants. The results amazed him. When he crossed purple in White Flowers, he only got plants with purple flowers. Then he crossed 2 of thos
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Listen 45 min Watts Towers in Los Angeles in June. Photo by Shutterstock.
“Heat is a silent and largely invisible killer. It is, in fact, actually the deadliest of all weather-related disasters combined,” says Edith de Guzman, co-founder of the LA Cooling Collaborative. She says, “I like to think of the image of a kid with a magnifying glass concentrating the sun into one area while surrounding areas remain untouched.”
It’s no accident that some local neighborhoods are turning into “urban heat islands,” according to Henrik Minassians-Palasan at CalStateNorthridge. “It goes back in history … to redlining and racially restrictive land covenants” in places including Watts and South East Los Angeles.