<p>There was also a question about of two brothers have the same proportion of thymine or something, they would have the same percentage of guanine and cytosine?</p>
<p>Oh yeah sorry… I forgot that. I put that too</p>
<p>I think I also put haploid for that oocyte and sperm question. It was talking about the secondary oocyte, right?</p>
<p>Not really because even though they have the same proportion of thymine and adenine, it can be any percentage so it doesn’t mean that cytosine and guanine will have the same. Like adenine and thymine can be 64 percent and the others 36 percent…</p>
<p>^Yup, Sajidur’s right.</p>
<p>I think one of the answer choices for that question was: they are closely related evolutionarily</p>
<p>Do you think that’s an answer?</p>
<p>For the pedigree question, regarding the diagonals, one of the answer choices was about all the other squares/circles in that row were siblings. Not sure if this is incorrect, but the twin one also makes sense.</p>
<p>@kerning, are you sure about that being an answer choice? Because I remember before choosing the twin choice, I was looking for an answer that talked about all the squares/circles in that row being siblings but didn’t see one. I just saw some random ones like one choice saying the male’s mother was his sister, etc. </p>
<p>@sajidur, I vaguely remember that question, but I think that’d be the answer then.</p>
<p>Yeah that’s true. For the pedigree question I also saw something like that saying the circle next to the two brothers are siblings… Maybe I read it wrong? </p>
<p>And did the two brothers have diagonals going through both of them? Or just one?</p>
<p>The other choice for the twin question was if one of the other squares on the same row was a brother of the other two. That wasn’t right because the square that they indicated married into the family, he wasn’t originally part of it</p>
<p>Alright then, most likely they were twins anyways, do you guys remember any more questions?</p>
<p>does anyone remember what the corn syrup question said? For some reason I don’t remember it.</p>
<p>It said something like: Why was the corn syrup used in the experiment?</p>
<p>I don’t remember the corn syrup question at all lol. Was that a molecular question? Cause I took eco.</p>
<p>Yeah i dont remember the corn syrup either. I took eco as well.</p>
<p>Haha maybe it was molecular… But I jut ever another question:</p>
<p>What most accounts for water’s physical property?
I put water’s ability to covalently bond… Does anyone agree?</p>
<p>For the Ecology section, anyone remember questions about the differences in hemoglobin for the various animals, what was the one about why there’s such a difference in the sequence when comparing two of them? I think one of the choices was about Lamprey fish.</p>
<p>yeah, the reason why water has so many unique physical properties is because it shares electrons unevenly or something. that’s what i got because there are other compounds that are covalently bonded, not just water.</p>
<p>^ I agree.</p>
<p>Same answer as kimchillove about the water question. </p>
<p>@kerning, ahh I had so much trouble on that question! I ended up putting the choice about hemoglobin having a different function or doing something different in the lamprey fish. Prettyyyyy sure I got it wrong. :/</p>