Stratus corneum
Reparitive phase - 2nd phase of bone healing
Where the bone broke. There are three primary types of bone: woven bone, cortical bone, and cancellous bone. Woven bone is found during embryonic development, during fracture healing (callus formation), and in some pathological states such as hyperparathyroidism and Paget disease. It is composed of randomly arranged collagen bundles and irregularly shaped vascular spaces lined with osteoblasts. Woven bone is normally remodeled and replaced with cortical or cancellous bone.
Head hair on both boys and girls thickens and darkens in the months to several years after birth. Pubic hair on both boys and girls thickens and darkens during puberty.
Callogenesis is the shoot development in callus, due to low auxin and hign cytokinin concentration in the culturing medium during tissue culture.
Callus is the bulging deposit that forms around the fracture.
change of responsibility formation
Cytokinesis in plants is achieved by the formation of a cell plate which slowly divides the cell in half. This eventually thickens to become a new cell wall.
Comets are the rocks that hit the earth during formation of oceans...
change of responsibility formation
change of responsibility formation
The periderm is the secondary protective (dermal) tissue that replaces the epidermis during growth in thickness of stems and roots of gymnosperms and dicotyledons (i.e., secondary growth). Unlike the epidermis, the periderm is a multilayered tissue system, the bulk of which usually constitutes the cork, or phellem.
The formation of tetrads are formed during p1(prophase 1)