Biology
Across
- 1. the formation of new and distinct species in the course of evolution.
- 4. calculated by dividing the number of times the allele of interest is observed in a population by the total number of copies of all the alleles
- 10. the reduced genetic diversity which results when a population is descended from a small number of colonizing ancestors.
- 13. a method of dating rocks and minerals using radioactive isotopes
- 15. (of an organ or part of the body) degenerate, rudimentary, or atrophied, having become functionless in the course of evolution.
- 17. pairing at meiosis and having the same structural features and pattern of genes.
- 18. the process by which a species becomes fitted to its environment
- 20. any difference between cells, individual organisms, or groups of organisms of any species
Down
- 2. hide or disguise the presence of (a person, animal, or object)
- 3. when a population is greatly reduced in size
- 5. the branch of biology and medicine concerned with the study of embryos and their development.
- 6. the process through which populations of living organisms adapt and change
- 7. the variety of life on Earth at all its levels
- 8. variation in the relative frequency of different genotypes in a small population, owing to the chance disappearance of particular genes as individuals die or do not reproduce.
- 9. used to arrange geological events, and the rocks they leave behind, in a sequence
- 11. the ability of an organism to pass on its genetic material to its offspring
- 12. the hypothesis that evolution proceeds chiefly by the accumulation of gradual changes (in contrast to the punctuationist model)
- 14. the total genetic diversity found within a population or a species
- 16. a group of individuals of the same species living and interbreeding within a given area.
- 19. the close external resemblance of an animal or plant (or part of one) to another animal, plant, or inanimate object.