<p>^ I thought something that lowers activation energy was pepsin, the enzyme. I think your’e right on the coenzyme being the vitamin, but I got it wrong. And the calcium one was the inorganic one.</p>
<p>there was an enzyme (not B12) in the choices… chose that for activation energy q</p>
<p>Lowering activation energy was the enzyme (amylase?)
Other than that, yeah.
And something about an inorganic molecule and regulating functions was calcium?</p>
<p>edit: jinx.</p>
<p>something that acts to lower activiation energy is an ezyme, so the answwer was anything that ended with an -ase, like amylase.</p>
<p>and vitamins are definitely coenzymes, while minerals are inorganic, and testosterone is a steroid (lipid)</p>
<p>Dude, that son problem is SOOOOO screwed up. Ok, great job collegeboard for mixing us up. I interpreted the question differently. It would be better to say what is the probability that they will have a son AND that the son will be colorblind. ***.</p>
<p>I know, I’m just whining… Looks like so far I got 4 wrong and 1 skipped. What do I get then?</p>
<p>yes you are right csquare… at leaast i hope so because that’s what i put</p>
<p>Mendel said nothing about- crossover
somatic body cell of 24- 12 from each parent
APES- not the brain cavity =(
Farm runoff- decrease in eutrophication?
Bacteria 5- produced toxins
pH 4.5 - 5.5- H+ decreasing
Bacteria #6- came from water
Really high concentrations- balanced fertilizer
Soil most likely to resist temp. change- wooded forests
Calvin Cycle- bundle sheath cells
Archaebacteria- similar to eukaryotes
Segmented seperation- annelids(earthworms)
light reactions equation- H2O -> O2
Pea genetics question- 50%
Wool genetics problem- 3/4
Cytosine- Guanine
Bases per Gene- 1000
Restriction enzyme- A
Colorblind Son genetics problem- 1/4
Bacteria- ammonia
Greatest Biomass- plants
Carbon Rocks- comes too slowly
Ventrel nerve cords- arthropods
Large intestine- watery feces
Evolution in populations - the one with 4, 5, 6
Substance causing growth - IAA
Identifying unknown microbe - Plants and protists
Mitosis diagram - III and IV
Pea plant problem - Most people said 250 though there is some considerable disagreement (aka me)
Coenzyme - Vitamin B12
Something that acts to lower activation energy - Amylase
Steroid that influences metabolism - Testosterone
Inorganic molecule that has a regulatory function - Calcium</p>
<p>and the one about the plant experiment, the control group thing, i put II and III… that seemed like the only one that made sense.
geez i wish i had more time to look over the test…</p>
<p>Let’s include a debates category :]</p>
<p>Mendel said nothing about- crossover
somatic body cell of 24- 12 from each parent
APES- not the brain cavity =(
Farm runoff- decrease in eutrophication?
Bacteria 5- produced toxins
pH 4.5 - 5.5- H+ decreasing
Bacteria #6- came from water
Really high concentrations- balanced fertilizer
Soil most likely to resist temp. change- wooded forests
Calvin Cycle- bundle sheath cells
Archaebacteria- similar to eukaryotes
Segmented seperation- annelids(earthworms)
light reactions equation- H2O -> O2
Pea genetics question- 50%
Wool genetics problem- 3/4
Cytosine- Guanine
Bases per Gene- 1000
Restriction enzyme- A
Bacteria- ammonia
Greatest Biomass- plants
Carbon Rocks- comes too slowly
Ventrel nerve cords- arthropods
Large intestine- watery feces
Evolution in populations - the one with 4, 5, 6
Substance causing growth - IAA
Identifying unknown microbe - Plants and protists
Mitosis diagram - III and IV
Coenzyme - Vitamin B12
Something that acts to lower activation energy - Amylase
Steroid that influences metabolism - Testosterone
Inorganic molecule that has a regulatory function - Calcium (mineral)</p>
<p>debates:
Colorblind Son genetics problem - 1/4 (prob of having colorblind son) or 1/2 (prob that their son will be colorblind)
Pea plant problem - 250 (homozygous dom) or 500 (homo dom + homo rec)
plant control - 1,2,3 or 2,3</p>
<p>I spent like, half a second on that son problem because in a Princeton Review practice test, there’s a question EXACTLY like that and I got it wrong because I chose 1/2, so the answer to today’s question is most likely 1/4.</p>
<p>Mendel said nothing about- crossover
somatic body cell of 24- 12 from each parent
APES- not the brain cavity =(
Farm runoff- decrease in eutrophication?
Bacteria 5- produced toxins
pH 4.5 - 5.5- H+ decreasing
Bacteria #6- came from water
Really high concentrations- balanced fertilizer
Soil most likely to resist temp. change- wooded forests
Calvin Cycle- bundle sheath cells
Archaebacteria- similar to eukaryotes
Segmented seperation- annelids(earthworms)
light reactions equation- H2O -> O2
Pea genetics question- 50%
Wool genetics problem- 3/4
Cytosine- Guanine
Bases per Gene- 1000
Restriction enzyme- A
Bacteria- ammonia
Greatest Biomass- plants
Carbon Rocks- comes too slowly
Ventrel nerve cords- arthropods
Large intestine- watery feces
Evolution in populations - the one with 4, 5, 6
Substance causing growth - IAA
Identifying unknown microbe - Plants and protists
Mitosis diagram - III and IV
Coenzyme - Vitamin B12
Something that acts to lower activation energy - Amylase
Steroid that influences metabolism - Testosterone
Inorganic molecule that has a regulatory function - Calcium (mineral)</p>
<p>debates:
Colorblind Son genetics problem - 1/4 (prob of having colorblind son) or 1/2 (prob that their son will be colorblind)
Pea plant problem - 250 (homozygous dom) or 500 (homo dom + homo rec)
plant control - 1,2,3 or 2,3
Ape and early human - not brain cavity, smaller upper jaw?</p>
<p>oh remember the question about the evolutionary thing of parasite? wat was the answer? was it that they don’t kill their hosts, but flourish anyway?</p>
<p>I think the pea plant problem shouldn’t be in the debates section</p>
<p>Agree on the parasites.</p>
<p>For the plant control, I put 1,2,3 because you have to look at 1 to know that 4 with its tip removed and lanolin/IAA added to the stem will grow roots normally.</p>
<p>i omitted 7 questions and got 4 wrong so far, wat would that be roughly?</p>
<p>yeah, that’s right, parasites that don’t kill their hosts but flourish. Almost an exact quote from the kaplan review book</p>
<p>whew… i don’t think i did as bad as i thought</p>
<p>have we exhausted all those hard questions?? I’m sure there’s like, 10 more.</p>
<p>ANd I know I’ve got 4 confirmed wrong, so that’s 5 points off :(</p>
<p>that stupid hominid skull problem - did anyone actually get that right???</p>
<p><<bhh1988>> i think ull get roughly 760 … that’s good</bhh1988></p>
<p>I can’t think of any more difficult questions. Someone needs to jog my memory…</p>