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英語 高校生

1枚目右ページの2行目、a patexted technology involving bacteria cleans the water, はinvolving bacteriaがa patented technologyを現在分詞の形で修飾していて、cleansが文の... 続きを読む

They are part of an experiment that Sogo, chief operating officer at FRD Japan, hopes will one day allow cost-effective inland farming of salmon Tokyo, gray salmon in a tank make quick movements, fighting for food. sea, but businessman Tetsuro Sogo is looking inland to raise one of the country's most loved sushi fish: salmon.\ In a mountainous area near Japan may be an island nation surrounded by the richness of the A You are preparing for agroup presentation on fish farming for your elan thought we needed a new way to produce more salmon," he explained. The company's process has two stages. First, tap water is converted 58 第2回 実戦問題 59 第6問 (配点 24) a シフト You have found the article below. 文字サイズ マトリー ジャンプ salmon farming. and enable Japanese to buy the homegrown fish for their sushi. “"We'll able to easily get high quality salmon wherever we are,” Sogo said The majority of the salmon consumed worldwide is farmed, not wila technology exports)." and the aquaculture market is dominated by Norway, which produces 1.3 million tonsa year. Farming at sea, the most common way to raise the fish, is complicated. The sea must be the right temperature, colder than 20 degrees Celsius, and only areas without strong waves and currents are tons of sushi-ready salmon. suitable - normally inlets or bays. Inland farming of salmon is often an impractical, expensive venture requiring lots of water and electricity to keep tanks clean. That hasn't stopped demand from exploding since the 1980s, with the United States, Russia, Europe, and Japan all fussing about the fish's rich pink flesh, according to the World Wildlife Fund. “Supply is not catching up with the growing demand," said Sogo, speaking at his test focility in Saitama, 50 km (31 miles) from the sea. Dressed in a suit like 35 明1 According to the article, what is NOT true about samon farmine? 0 Itis not easy to make profit by inland farming. の More than halfof the salmon consumed in the world comes from farming. Norway is leading the world market. a typical “salaryman" corefully monitors the fish as though he is wWatching his own children ““We - except fora pair of white rubber bonts _ Sogo O Strong waves are necessary to keep the water clean. 「第2回

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化学 高校生

詳しく解説してください!

化学 MISSION 5 解答||の 解説 問題集 O P8 化学 MISSION 5 実験結果を表にまとめて考える(2) O日標時間4分 次の有機化合物A~Eに対し、以下の確認実験1~5を行った。しかし、これらの実験だけでは、 A-Eの5種類の化合物を判別することはできなかった。さらにどのような実験を行えば、すべ ての有機化合物を判別できるか。最も適当なものを、下のD~5のうちから一つ選べ。 - 問われている内容を確認する。 A:乳酸 B:アラニン C:アニリン D:グルコース E:サリチル酸 実験1 水に溶けるかどうかを調べる。 実験2 アンモニア性硝酸銀水溶進を加え,銀が析出するかどうかを調べる。 実験3 塩化鉄(I)水溶液を加え、赤紫色になるかどうかを調べる。 実験4 酸酸性ニクロム酸カリウム水溶流を加え、黒色物質が生じるかどうかを調べる。 実験5 統酸を触媒にしてメタノールを加え。選炎鎮痛剤のにおいがするかどうかを調べる。 実験結果を表にO×でまとめる。 0 フェーリング液を加え,穏やかに加熱する。 ウ素溶液を加える。 フェノールフタレイン溶流を加える。 の ニンヒドリン溶液を加える。 5 水酸化ナトリウム水洋液を加えた後。少量の確機鋼(I)木審液を加える。

未解決 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

ものすごく至急です💦今日授業で当てられそうなのですか答えが確実じゃなくて焦っています 答えだけでいいのでほんとうによろしくお願いします 根拠の場所あれば教えて欲しいです

次の英文を読み,下の問いに答えなさい。 We all know the saying “To err is human." And this is true enough. When somethine 80es wrong, the cause is overwhelmingly attributed to human error: airplane crashes (70 percent), car wrecks (90 percent), workplace accidents (also 90 percent), You name it, and humans are usually to blame, And once a human is blamed, the inquiry usually stops ans ISL stu an 止 there. But it shouldn'tー atleast not if we want to eliminate the error. S In many cases, our mistakes are not our fault, at least not entirely. For we all have certain biases" in the way we see, remember, and perceive the world around us, and these biases make us commit certain kinds of errors, Right-handed people, for instance, tend to turn right when entering a building, even though that may not afford the best route to take. And most of us, whether left- or right-handed, show a preference for the number 7 and the color blue. We are also so persuaded by our first impressions of things that we are reluctant to change our first answer on a test; yet many studies have shown we would be better off if we did exactly this. Qur expectations can shape the way we see the world and often the way we act in itas well, In one case, people encountered an unknown man and were later told his occupation. When they were told that the man was a truck driver, they said he weighed more%; when they were told he was a dancer, they said he weighed less. In another case, half the people in a restaurant were told their free glass of wine that night came from France; the other half were told their wine came from somewhere else. Not only did the second group eat less of their meals, but they headed for the doors more quickly. Farmers too show the same tendency. Farmers who believe in global warming, for instance, have been shown to remember temperatures as being warmer than those recorded in statistical tables, And what about farmers who do not believe in global warming? They remembered temperatures that were colder than those in the record books. What's important about these examples is not that we think a truck driver is fatter than a dancer or that temperatures are warmer than they used to be. What'simportant is that these effects occur largely outside of our consciousness; we're biased ー we just don't know we' re biased. Some of these tendencies are so strone that eyen_when_we do know

未解決 回答数: 1