Macroscopic scene - the "large view" of a crime scene, including things such as locations, the victim's body, cars, and buildings.
Microscopic scene - a crime scene viewed in terms of specific objects and pieces of evidence associated with the crime, such as knives, guns, hairs, fibers, and biological fluids.
There are many microscopic animals. You will need a microscope and a slide mounting kit to see them. You might have a still or slow moving natural body of water near you. If so get a jar of water from it. Put a drop between two slides and look at it under your microscope. You may see some type of animal life.
Internal energy at the microscopic level and thermodynamic or mechanical energy at the macroscopic level.
well your answer is in the question it is considered microscopic if you need a microscope to examine it
By definition, a glass has little or no microscopic or molecular structure, although most glasses contain crystals or crystaline regions, often at a microscopic level, but these will be randomly distributed. Crystals are not glasses. Glasses are not crystalline.
Microscopic fossils are also known as microfossils.
A germ is microscopic as well as macroscopic.
The study of Gastroenterology can be both microscopic as well as macroscopic.
It is a microscopic.
Macroscopic
All proteins are microscopic.All proteins are microscopic.
temparature is a microscopic entity as it affects the motion of microscopic particles.
macroscopic and microscopic
i think it is a Microsoft windows
whT are the different shape of macroscopic sociology and microsciology
Macroscopic is when something is large enough to be perceived or examined by the unaided eye, where as microscopic is where you need an eye aid to help examine it. Example: For a rock you could examine it with your eyes without the use of a microscope, it would be macroscopic. The microscopic cell beside it, which you cannot see without a microscope, would be microscopic.
Macroscopic fungi are visible to the naked eye and include mushrooms, while microscopic fungi are not visible and can only be seen under a microscope. Macroscopic fungi typically have complex structures like fruiting bodies, while microscopic fungi are more simplistic in structure. Examples of macroscopic fungi include mushrooms, while examples of microscopic fungi include yeasts and molds.
This is a big difference of scale; at microscopic scale more details are revealed.