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Use of the senses to gather and record information about structures or processes in the natural world. |
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• Recorded observations or items of information. |
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A logical conclusion based on observations (data). |
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Data that consists of recorded measurements. |
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| Data in the form of descriptions |
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Any event or object that appears in the natural world and is of scientific significance or interest. |
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A general conclusion supported by a large number of observations or other data. |
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| Anything that takes up space and has mass. |
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| A pure substance that can not be broken down into other substances by chemical means. |
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| Any element that makes up less than 0.01% of the mass of a living organism but is critical to the health of the organism. |
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| A substance containing two or more different elements that are chemically combined together. |
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| The simplest particle of an element that retains all the properties of that element. |
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| A subatomic particle with a single unit of positive electric charge (+). |
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| A subatomic particle with a single unit of negative electric charge (-). |
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| A subatomic particle with a single unit of negative electric charge (-). |
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| A subatomic particle that has no charge (is electrically neutral). |
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| The central core of an atom that containsprotons and neutrons . |
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| The number of protons in an atom's nucleus. |
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| One of several forms of an element, each containing the same number of protons in their atoms but a different number of neutrons. |
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| An isotope in which the nucleus decays (breaks down) over time, giving off radiation in the form of matter and energy. |
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A suggested, testable answer to a welldefined scientific question. |
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A proposed outcome based on a given hypothesis. |
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A procedure designed to test the validity of a given hypothesis. |
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A factor or condition which could affect the results of an experiment. |
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A set or group in an experiment which has or is given the condition the experiment is designed to test. |
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A set or group in an experiment which has or is given the contrasting condition to the one the experiment is designed to test. |
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An experiment that limits the effects of variables so that only one variable is being tested. |
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| Two or more atoms held together by covalent bonds. |
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| An atom or group of atoms that has become electrically charged as a result of gaining or losing an electron(s). |
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| A chemical bond that occurs when an atom transfers an electron to another atom. |
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| A chemical bond that forms when two atoms share electrons. |
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| Breaking of old and formation of new chemical bonds that result in new substances. |
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| A compound or atom that is involved in a chemical reaction.d |
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| New material created as a result of a chemical reaction. |
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| A chemical reaction in which two different elements are bonded together forming a compound. |
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| A chemical reaction in which a compound is broken down into its elements. |
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| Single Displacement Reaction |
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| A chemical reaction between an element and a compound which yields a different element and compound. |
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| Double Displacement Reaction |
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| A chemical reaction between two compounds that yields two different compounds. |
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| A molecule in which opposite ends have opposite electric charges |
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| A bond created by the weak attraction of a slightly positive hydrogen atom to a slightly negative portion of another molecule. |
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| A tendency of molecules of the same kind to stick to one another. |
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| An attraction between unlike molecules. |
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| A uniform mixture of two or more substances. |
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| The part of a solution that dissolves the other substance and is present in the greater amount |
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| The part of a solution that is dissolved and is present in a lesser amount |
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| A solution in which water is the solvent. |
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| A compound that donates H+ ions to an aqueous solution and measures less than 7 on the pH scale. |
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| A compound that removes H+ ions from an aqueous solution and that measures more than 7 on the pH scale. |
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| A substance that maintains a fairly constant pH in a solution by accepting H+ ions when their levels rise and donating H+ ions when their levels fall. |
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| A class of organic compounds based on sugar molecules. |
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| A monomer composed of a single sugar molecule. |
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| A sugar composed of two monosaccharides. |
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| A long polymer chain made up of simple sugar monomers |
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| A polysaccharide in plant cells that consists entirely of glucose monomers. |
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| A polysaccharide consisting of glucose monomers that reinforces plant-cell walls. |
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| One of a class of water-avoiding (hydrophobic) compounds |
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| An organic compound consisting of a three-carbon backbone (glycerol) attached to three fatty acids. |
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| A fat in which all three fatty acid chains contain no double bonds and hold the maximum possible number of hydrogen atoms. |
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| A lipid molecule with four fused carbon rings. |
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| A steroid molecule present in the plasma membranes of animal cells. |
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| A class of organic compounds that stores and carries important information used for cell function. |
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| A building block monomer of nucleic acid polymers. |
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| A nucleotide composed of a single or double ring of carbon and nitrogen atoms with attached functional groups |
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| A 5-carbon sugar based on a ring-shaped framework. |
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| The pentose found in the bases that make up RNA. |
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