Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Complementarity of plants to animals; Chloroplasts is complimented
Mon, 18 Nov 2002 11:29:24 GMT P van Rijckevorsel wrote:
Archimedes Plutonium schreef Question: these cell walls of plants are they carbon? + + + Obviously so + + + Question: these chloroplasts of plants-- do animals or bacteria have some inverse or reverse entity? + + + ? ? ? Are there any intermediates in plants, and by that I mean any cell walls of plants that allow for calcium to be the basis rather than carbon? With my Trek carbon-fibre bicycle, I tried to make a human skeleton system out of carbon. If it is impossible then it would impossible for the reverse of trying to make a plant whose framework is no longer carbon but that of calcium. If true, what I suspect is the impossibility barrier is the electrical system that each living organism possesses. If you switch calcium for carbon or carbon for calcium then you destroy the electrical communication system of the organism and so a replacement is impossible. Chloroplasts. The inverse or reverse in animals (the compliment) would be some organs or system of animals that makes or allows animals/bacteria to move around. Plants are stationary for the most part. In bacteria that are able to move around such as the flagella. Then the inverse or reverse or Compliment of chloroplasts is the flagella for certain type of bacteria and those bacteria would then be members of the animal kingdom. Archimedes Plutonium, whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
using foraging animals as lawnmower substitutes; return to having animals around every home | Plant Science | |||
Guard cell chloroplasts | Plant Biology | |||
Complementarity of plants to animals; Chloroplasts is complimented by flagella | Plant Science | |||
Complementarity or contrariness | Plant Science | |||
Complementarity of plant kingdom to animal kingdom | Plant Science |