<p>HAHA i was wondering too! It’s an ambiguous question-should we complain to CB?? I think so. Someone please do ittt</p>
<p>any anyone want to answer my Ti-83 question? so desperate</p>
<p>HAHA i was wondering too! It’s an ambiguous question-should we complain to CB?? I think so. Someone please do ittt</p>
<p>any anyone want to answer my Ti-83 question? so desperate</p>
<p>haha crapp i thought it was for the mothers… alsdkjfasljf 75/80 ha is there a chance that’ll still be 800?</p>
<p>if i get that one right i would get 77/80… haha darnnn the guessing penalty.</p>
<p>lol they had to have been talking about the mothers.</p>
<p>sooooo why is it not litters then? ><</p>
<p>Did anyone else read the tundra problem? Wasn’t there an answer about there being too much humus for roots to dig through?
Or was I just hallucinating?</p>
<p>There can’t be 120 rats in a litter. It makes no sense. And even if they were talking about the babies, they can’t be from the same litter if they’re from different mothers.</p>
<p>^ The answer to the tundra problem was that deep root systems can’t develop in the permafrost.</p>
<p>^LOL I think you were… tundra = cold, frozen ground all year long, little vegetation (all are low-lying), little precipitation, no tall trees… frozen</p>
<p>@sweetnight The answer to the Tundra question was…the soil makes it hard for the roots to grow deep. something like that. the humus answer was there…but not as you phrased it</p>
<p>Yeah I put the freezing ground as the answer, but I swear there was an answer choice that had to do with humus. I just remeber reading that then laughing Hahahah don’t tell me I read that wrong too…</p>
<p>For the animal diagrams, was that a megalodon?</p>
<p>ohhhhh well idk, i guess food should be right then. darn i was really hoping for a definite 800.</p>
<p>does this test have a generous curve?</p>
<p>Just looked it up, I mistook humus (soil) for hummus (dip) hahah I was like *** CB? Who is stupid enough to think there is a layer of Indian dip int he ground?</p>
<p>LOL! ^ humus is dark soil rich in nutrients. Hummus is dip.</p>
<p>HAHAHAHHAHA I had no idea what that was but I pictured it as a layer of hummus on the ground and I was like ■■■■■ ***.</p>
<p>lmfaoooo</p>
<p>Oh and that question about which biome would have the most diversity- it was temperate deciduous forest, right? There was one word in there that I never heard of before.</p>
<p>Yeah ive never heard of the bentic ocean before…i was like…er…</p>
<p>The benthic ocean is the ocean floor. The one I never heard of was C, I think.</p>
<p>yeah temp. decid.</p>
<p>i put coral reef…</p>
<p>[Coral</a> reefs are most fecund cradles of diversity - life - 08 January 2010 - New Scientist](<a href=“http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn18360-coral-reefs-are-most-fecund-cradles-of-diversity.html]Coral”>http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn18360-coral-reefs-are-most-fecund-cradles-of-diversity.html)</p>
<p>? haha</p>
<p>yeah I was thinking coral reef, but it’s not a biome. Then again, I don’t recall if the question specifically asked for a biome.</p>