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Plant and Animal Cells Flashcards

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605482956CellA membrane bound structure that is the basic unit of life
605482957Cell Membraneflexible barrier around a cell; regulates what enters and leaves the cell
605482958Cell TheoryThis says that all living things are made of cells, that cells are the basic unit of structure and function and that cells only come from other cells.
605482959Cell wallA rigid structure made of cellulose that surrounds the cells of plants
605482960Chloroplastcontains chlorophyll and is the site of photosynthesis
605482961CytoplasmThe region of the cell between the cell membrane and the nucleus, fluid, chemical reactions occurr here.
605482962EukaryoteA cell that contains a nucleus and membrane bound organelles
605482963LysosomesAn organelle containing digestive enzymes
605482964MitochondriaPowerhouse of the cell, organelle that is the site of energy production through cellular respiration
605482965NucleusThe organelle that contains the DNA and controls the processes of the cell
605482966OrganelleOne of several bodies with a specialized function that is suspended in the cytoplasm of the cell (mitochondria, nucleus, ribosomes, lysosomes, cytoplasm, cell membrane, chloroplast, vacuole, endoplasmic reticulum, DNA)
605482967VacuoleA fluid filled organelle that stores enzymes or water "food storage"
605482968Animal Celldoes not have a chloroplast or cell wall. Round in shape
605482969Plant Cellsquare shaped and contains cell wall and chloroplast and contains one large vacuole.
605482970chromosomesDNA, located inside the nucleus Makes you who you are
605482971cellular respirationoccurs in the mitochondria to create energy.
605482972photosynthesisoccurs in the chloroplast of plant cells. Makes food/energy for the plant
605482973Osmosisdiffusion of water through a selectively permeable membrane.
605482974Diffusionthe process by which molecules move from an area of higher concentration to lower concentration.
605482975endoplasmic reticulumtransports nutrients to the nucleus
605482976golgi bodya structure in a cell that receives proteins and other newly formed materials from the endoplasmic reticulum, packages them, and distributes them to other parts of the cell

medical terminology Flashcards

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202541983aden/ogland
202541984arthr/ojoint
202541985bi/olife
202541986carcin/ocancerous
202541987cardi/oheart
202541988cephal/ohead
202541989cerebr/obrain (largest part)
202541990cyst/ourinary bladder
202541991cyt/ocell
202541992dermat/oskin
202541993electr/oelectricity
202541994encephal/obrain
202541995eneter/ointestines (usually small intestines)
202541996erythr/ored
202541997gastr/ostomach
202541998gnos/oknowledge
202541999gynec/owoman, female
202542000hemat/oblood
202542001hepat/oliver
202542002lapar/oabdomen
202542003leuk/owhite
202542004nephr/o, ren/okidney
202542005neur/onerve
202542006onc/otumor
202542007ophthalm/oeye
202542008oste/obone
202542009path/odisease
202542010psych/omind
202542011rhin/onose
202542012sarc/oflesh
202542013thromb/oclot
202542014-al, -icpertaining to, pertaining to
202542015-algiapain
202542016-cytecell
202542017-ectomyremoval, excision
202542018-emiablood condition
202542019-gramrecord
202542020-ismcondition;process
202542021-itisinflammation
202542022-logistspecialist in the study of
202542023-logyprocess of study
202542024-omatumor, mass
202542025-osisabnormal condition
202542026-scopeinstrument to visually examine
202542027-scopyprocess of visual examination
202542028-sisstate of
202542029-tomyprocess of cutting; incision
202542030a-, an-no, not
202542031dia-complete, thorough
202542032endo-within
202542033exo-outside
202542034hyper-too much, excessive
202542035hypo-below, less than normal
202542036pro-before
202542037re-back
202542038retro-behind
202542039trans-across, through

Medical Terminology Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
296416257supinelying face up
296416258pronelying face down
296416259sagittal planedivides the body into right and left sides that may or may not be equal
296416260midsagittal/median planedivides the body down the middle into left and right sides
296416261frontal/coronal planedivides the body into front and back sides
296416262transverse/horizontal planedivides the body into top and bottom parts
296418227upper extremityfrom the shoulder to the fingertips
296418228armfrom the shoulder to the elbow
296418229forearmfrom the elbow to the wrist
296418230lower extremityfrom the hip to the hips of the toes
296418231superficialtoward the surface
296418232deepaway from the surface
296418233anterior/ventraltoward the front
296418234superior/cranialtoward the top of the head
296418235inferior/caudalaway from the head/toward the tail end
296418236medialtoward the midline or median plane
296418237lateralaway from the midline or median plane
296418238proximaltoward the attachment to the truck or toward the center of mass
296418239distalaway from the attachment to the truck or away from the center of mass
296418240flexionmotion that shortens a limb
296418241extensionmotion that lengthens a limb
296418242abductionmovement away from the median plane
296418243adductionmovement toward the median plane
296418244inversionturning a body part inward
296418245eversionturning a body part outward
296418246supinationturning a body part upward
296418247pronationturning a body part downward
296418248arthr/ojoint
296418249ankyl/ostiffness
296418250aque/owater
296418251audi/ohearing
296418252brachi/oarm
296418253carp/owrist
296418254cephal/ohead
296418255crani/oskull
296418256cost/oribs
296418257cervic/oneck
296418258cirrh/oyellow
296418259cyan/oblue
296418260chondr/ocartilage
296418261cerebr/ocerebrum
296496126derm/oskin
296496127erythr/ored
296496128encephal/obrain
296496129femor/ofemur
296496130gastr/ostomach
296496131hepat/oliver
296496132hem/o hemat/oblood
296496133humer/ohumerus
296496134home/osame, like
296496135heter/odifferent
296496136ili/oilium
296496137ischi/oischium
296496138idi/opeculiar, unknown
296496139kinesi/omovement
296496140lamin/olamina of vertebra
296496141melan/oblack
296496142myel/ospinal cord
296496143my/omuscle
296496144neur/onerve
296496145noct/onight
296496146ocul/oeye
296496147orth/obone
296496148opt/ovision
296496149ot/oear
296496150ox/o ox/ioxygen
296496151pneum/oair
296496152path/odisease
296496153pattell/opatella
296496154pod/ofood
296496155ranchi/ospine
296496156rhin/onose
296496157sclera/ospir/o
296496158sphygm/opulse
296496159spondyl/overtebra
296496160stern/osternum
296496161thromb/oblood clott
296496162thorac/othoracic spine
296496163tibi/otibia
296496164ten/o tendin/o tend/otendon
296496165ton/otension
296496166vertebr/overtebra
296496167ante-, pre-, pro-before, in front of
296496168a-, an-, im-, in-without, not
296496169ab-away from
296496170ad-toward
296496171anti-, contra-against
296496172brady-slow
296496173bi-two
296496174circum-, periaround
296496175dia-, trans-through, across
296496176dipl-, diple-double
296496177dys-painful, difficult
296496178epi-above, upon
296496179ec-, exout, out from
296496180exto-, exo-, extra-outside
296496181endo-, intra-in, within
296496182hypo-, infra-, sub-under/below
296496183hemi-, semi-half
296496184hyper-excessive
296496185inter-between
296496186intra-wintin
296496187meso-, medi-middle
296496188macro-large
296496189micro-small
296496190mono-, uni-one
296496191multi-, poly-manny
296496192mal-bad
296496193pseudo-false
296496194post-after, behind
296496195para-near, beside
296496196quadri-four
296496197super-, supraabove, excessive
296496198syn-, sym-joined, together
296496199tri-three
296496200tachy-rapid
296496201-ac, -al, -ar, -ary, -eal, -ic, -ous, -ticpertaining to
296496202-ia, -ism, -ycondition
296496203-iatrytreatment
296496204-istspecialist
296496205-ole, -icle, -ula, -ulesmall
296496206-algesia, -algiapain
296496207-desisfixation
296496208-esthesiasensation
296496209-emsisvomiting
296496210-gramrecord
296496211-graphinstrument to record
296496212-malaciasoftening
296496213-megalyenlargement
296496214-penabreathing
296496215-phoresiscarrying
296496216-peniadecrease
296496217-physisgrowth
296496218-plastysurgical repair
296496219-scopeinstrument for examining
296496220-scopyvisual exam
296496221a.c.before meals
296496222ACLanterior cruciate ligament
296496223ADLactivities of daily living
296496224AFOankle foot orthosis
296496225AKAabove knee amputation
296496226ambambulate
296496227axaxillary/armpit
296496228APanteroposterior
296496229AEabove the elbow
296496230ANSautonomic nervous system
296496231AROMactive range of motion
296496232AAROMactive assisted range of motion
296496233b.i.dtwice daily
296496234BPblood pressure
296496235BEbelow the elbow
296496236BKAbelow the knee amputation
296496237BMbowel movement
296496238cathcatheter
296496239C/Ocomplaint of
296496240CAcancer
296496241CBCcomplete blood count
296496242CCchief complaint
296496243cccubic centimeters
296496244CGAcontact guard assist
296496245CADcoronary artery disease
296496246COPDchronic obstructive pulmonary disease
296496247CO2carbon dioxide
296496248CPRcardiopulmonary resuscitation
296496249CVAcerebrovascular accident or stroke
296496250CVDcerebrovascular disease
296496251CNScentral nervous system
296496252CTcomputed tomography scan
296496253CVcardiovascular
296496254CCUcoronary care unit
296496255CHFcongestive heart failure
296496256CDHcongenital dislocation of the hip
296496257CPTcarpal tunnel syndrome
296496258D/C or DCdischarge or discontinue
296496259Dxdiagnosis
296496260DDXdifferential diagnosis
296496261DMdiabetes mellitus
296496262DNRdo not resuscitate
296496263DOEdyspena on exertion
296496264DTRdeep tendon reflexes
296496265DVTdeep venous thrombosis
296496266Decubdecubitus (lying down)
296496267DJDdegenerative joint disease
296496268ECG or EKGelectrocardiogram
296496269EEGelectroencephalogram
296496270EMGelectromyography
296496271ERemergency room
296496272ETOHalcohol
296496273FWBfull weight bearing
296496274FWWfront wheeled walker
296496275Fxfracture
296496276GIgastrointestinal
296496277H & Phistory and physical exam
296496278hrhour
296496279h.s.at bedtime
296496280H/O or h/ohistory of
296496281HAheadache
296496282HTNhypertension
296496283Hxhistory
296496284Hgb, hbb, or Hbhemoglobin
296496285HDhip disarticulation
296496286HEPhome exercise program
296496287HMPhot moist pack
296496288HNPherniated nucleus pulposus (disk)
296496289I & Dincision and drainage
296496290I & Ointake and output
296496291IMintramuscular
296496292IMPimpression or diagnosis
296496293injinjection
296496294IUinternational units
296496295IVintravenous
296496296ICFintracelluar fluid
296496297IDDMinsulin dependent diabetes mellitus
296496298jtjoint
296496299Kpotassium
296496300kgkilogram
296496301KDknee disarticulation
296496302lbpound
296496303LBPlow back pain
296496304LLQleft lower quadrant
296496305LUQleft upper quadrant
296496306ltleft
296496307LTGlong term goal
296496308MCLmedical collateral ligament
296496309mlmilliliters
296496310MSmusculosketal
296496311MRImagnetic resonance imaging
296496312mgmilligrams
296496313MVPmitral valve prolapse
296496314MImyocardial infarction (heart attack)
296496315MSmultiple sclerosis
296496316N/Vnausea or vomiting
296496317Nasodium
296496318NKAno known allergies
296496319noenight
296496320NPO or n.p.o.nothing by mouth
296496321NWBnon weight bearing
296496322NSAIDnonsteriodial anti-inflammatory drug
296496323NIDDMnon-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
296496324O2oxygen
296496325OOBout of bed
296496326ORIFopen reduction, internal fixation
296496327ORTH or Orthoorthopedics
296496328ozounce
296496329OAosteoarthritis
296496330Ppulse
296496331pcafter meals
296496332po or per osby mouth
296496333postafter
296496334prnas needed
296496335ppafter meals
296496336PCLposterior cruciate ligament
296496337PEDSpediatrics
296496338PERRLApupils equal round reactive to light and accommodation
296496339Pltplatelets
296496340PWBpartial weight bearing
296496341PAposteroanterior
296496342PEphysical exam
296496343PNSperipheral nervous system
296496344PROMpassive range of motion
296496345qevery
296496346q.d.every day
296496347q.i.d.four times a day
296496348qhevery hour
296496349q2hevery two hours
296496350q4hevery four hours
296496351qAMevery morning
296496352qhsevery bed time
296496353qodevery other day
296496354qPMevery evening
296496355qsas much as is sufficent
296496356R/Orule out
296496357ROMrange of motion
296496358ROSreview of systems
296496359RDSrespiratory disease syndrome
296496360RArheumatoid arthritis
296496361rtright
296496362RWrolling walker
296496363SLsublingual
296496364s/pstatus post
296496365SOBshortness of breath
296496366statimmediately
296496367SNSsympathetic nervous system
296496368sonosonogram
296496369Sxsymptoms
296496370SDshoulder disarticulation
296496371STGshort term goal
296496372Ttemperature
296496373tidthree times daily
296496374THRtotal hip replacement
296496375THAtotal hip arthroplasty
296496376TKAtotal knee arthroplasty
296496377TKRtotal knee replacement
296496378TDWBtouch down weight bearing
296496379TTWBtoe touch weight bearing
296496380TPRtemperature, pulse, respiration
296496381TIAtransient ischemic attack
296496382TBItraumatic brain injury
296496383UA or u/aurinalysis
296496384URIupper respiratory infection
296496385UTIurinary tract infection
296496386VSSvital signs stable
296496387Wtweight
296496388w/cwheelchair
296496389WBATweight bearing as tolerated
2964963902secondary to, resulting from

Give Me Liberty!: An American History Group 2 Flashcards

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416489575"wage slavery"occurred during the industrial capitalism stage, it forced workers to work for next to no money, essentially creating a modern slave
416489576The Lowell "System"Young, unmarried women recruited from country farms to work in (Lowell, Mass) factories; lived in boarding houses or dormitories maintained by owners.
416489577Mill Girlsyoung unmarried women from Yankee farm families dominated the workforce that tended the spinning machines. To prersuade parents to allow their daughters to do this, Lowell set up boarding houses with strict rules regulating personal behavior. They also established lecture halls and churches
416489578urban slavesworked in bakeries, factories, markets, mills, and offices..(had less autonomy than plantation slaves because there were more authorities to watch them).
416501275Southern WASP population who owned slaves25%
416501276Underground Railroada system of secret routes used by escaping slaves to reach freedom in the North or in Canada
416501277Harriet TubmanUnited States abolitionist born a slave on a plantation in Maryland and became a famous conductor on the Underground Railroad leading other slaves to freedom in the North (1820-1913)
416501278Frederick DouglassUnited States abolitionist who escaped from slavery and became an influential writer and lecturer in the North (1817-1895)
416501279David WalkerHe was a black abolitionist who called for the immediate emancipation of slaves. He wrote the "Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World." It called for a bloody end to white supremacy. He believed that the only way to end slavery was for slaves to physically revolt.
416501280Nat TurnerSlave in Virginia who started a slave rebellion in 1831; largest sign of black resistance to slavery in America and led the state legislature of Virginia to a policy that said no one could question slavery..executed..led to gag rule..no discussion of slavery in HORs
416501281Slave Codesslave codes were laws passed by southern slaves to keep slaves from either running away or rebelling. these laws forbade slaves to gather in groups of three of more. they couldn't leave their owner's land without a written pass. slaves were not allowed to own a gun. and unfortunately could not learn to read or write. they could also not testify in court.
416501282Immigrants in the mid-19th centuryGermany and Ireland
416501283Second Great AwakeningA series of religious revivals starting in 1801, based on Methodism and Baptism. Stressed a religious philosophy of salvation through good deeds and tolerance for all Protestant sects. The revivals attracted women, Blacks, and Native Americans.
416501284Lyman BeecherPresbyterian clergyman, temperance movement leader and a leader of the Second Great Awakening of the United States. (spoke of evils of alcohol)
416501285Charles Grandison FinneyAn evangelist who was one of the greatest preachers of all time (spoke in New York City). He also made the "anxious bench" for sinners to pray and was was against slavery and alcohol.
416501286Horace MannSecretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education, he was a prominent proponent of public school reform, and set the standard for public schools throughout the nation.
416501287Utopian CommunitiesIdealistic and impractical communities. Who, Rather than seeking to create an ideal government or reform the world, withdrew from the sinful, corrupt world to work their miracles in microcosm, hoping to imitate the elect state of affairs that existed among the Apostles...(want to create "perfect communities")
416501288Shakersbelieved in both Jesus and teachings of a mystic named Ann Lee; were celibate and could only increase their numbers through recruitment and conversion, they eventually ceased to exist. (utopian group who splintered from Quakers)
416501289OneidaThe Perfectionist Utopian movement began in New York. People lived in a commune and shared everything, even marriages. (John Noye)
416501290Temperanceabstaining from excess
416501291Abolitionthe movement to end slavery
416501292American Colinization Societysociety founded in 1817 that tried to gradually eliminate slavery and relocated slaves to present day Liberia (abolitionist group)
416501293William Lloyd GarrisonWhite Abolitionist - Early 1800s - published The Liberator...anti slavery society
416501294Free Soilersanti-slavery agitators; there was a "Free Soil Party" from 1848 to 1854 (it was absorbed by the Republican Party); "The Free-Soilers' historic slogan: 'free soil, free speech, free labor, and free men'... attracted small farmers, debtors, village merchants, and household and mill workers, who resented the prospect of black-labour competition (opposed expansion of slavery into Western territories)
416501295Declaration of Sentimentsseries of resolutions issued at the end of the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848; modeled after the Declaration of Independence, the list of grievances called for economic and social equality for women, along with a demand for the right to vote.

Give Me Liberty!: An American History Group 3 Flashcards

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416509907Panic of 1837Ecnomic downturn caused by loose lending practices of stat banks' and overspeculation. Martin Van Buren spent most of his time in office attempting to stablize and lessen the economic situation (under Jackson who ordered backing by gold or silver)
416509908Manifest Destinybelief that the U.S. was destined to secure territory from "sea to sea," from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean. This rationale drove the acquisition of territory.
416509909Mexican-American Warafter Mexican refusal to sell California-New Mexico region, Polk sent troops and it ended w/ Treat of Guadalupe-Hidalgo...we got 55% of Mexico...annexation of TX
416509910Mormonsreligious group that migrated to Utah to escape religious persecution
416509911California Gold Rush1848 gold was discovered by James W. Marshall at Sutter's Mill, in Coloma, California. News of the discovery soon spread, resulting in some 300,000 men, women, and children coming to California from the rest of the United States and abroad. These early gold-seekers, called "forty-niners," traveled to California by sailing boat and in covered wagons across the continent, often facing substantial hardships on the trip. San Francisco grew from a small settlement to a boomtown, and roads, churches, schools and other towns were built throughout California. A system of laws and a government were created, leading to the admission of California as a state in 1850
416509912Mr. Polk's Warthe war with Mexico had mixed views throughout the Union. It was popular in the Mississippi Valley, but it was called Mr. Polk's War in the northeast. Whigs generally opposed the war, but party members in Congress voted to support the America soldiers and marines during the fighting. Abraham Lincoln believed Polk rushed the country into war over disputed territory between the Nueces and the Rio Grande. His views were not popular and he chose not to run for reelection as a Whig congressman.
416509913Wilmot ProvisoDispute over whether any Mexican territory that America won during the Mexican War should be free or a slave territory. A representative named David Wilmot introduced an amendment stating that any territory acquired from Mexico would be free. This amendment passed the House twice, but failed to ever pass in Senate. The "Wilmot Proviso", as it became known as, became a symbol of how intense dispute over slavery was in the U.S.
416509914Donner Partyin 1846 a group of 87 overlanders, known as this party after the two brothers who lead them, were trapped by winter snows high up in the sierra nevada. after 41 died of starvation, those alive faced the choice of death or cannibalism, many resorted to cannibalism.
416509915Comprimise of 1850bunch of bills (Henry Clay) passed separately; Cali becomes a free state, territorial gov't to be established in NM and UT.. border with TX settled.
416509916Popular Sovereigntypeople hold the final authority in all matters of government
416568572Revision of the Fugitive Slave Actticks off North; it is punishable to not help Southerner who is missing a slave. Also, Northerners must give a horse to S.'s if they need one. Also enables federally mandated judges to decide whether or not a slave was a runaway
416568573Uncle Tom's CabinNovel written by Harriet Beecher Stowe about a slave who's ordered to be beaten to death by two other slaves. Showed northerners the horrors of slavery while southerners attack it as an exaggeration, it was also a cause of the Civil War.
416568574Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854)created the territories of Kansas and Nebraska, opened new lands, repealed the Missouri Compromise of 1820, and allowed settlers in those territories to determine if they would allow slavery within their boundaries.
416568575Bleeding Kansas (1856)A sequence of violent events involving abolitionists and pro-Slavery elements that took place in Kansas-Nebraska Territory. The dispute further strained the relations of the North and South, making civil war imminent.
416568576Bleeding SumnerWhen Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts denounced "the crime against Kansas" in a widely publicized speech, a member of Congress from South Carolina, Preston Brooks, attacked him on the Senate floor and beat him senseless with a cane.
416568577new Republican partyFormed by antislavery Whigs and Democrats (also free-soilers and know-nothings)
416568578Sack of Lawrence(May 1856) an attack, led by pro-slavery men, on abolitionists living in the city of Lawrence, Kansas; these pro-slavery men were sent to arrest antislavery leaders in Lawrence and in the process, they (the pro-slavery men) burned the town, robbed many buildings, and destroyed printing presses used to print abolitionist newspapers
416568579John Brownviolent abolitionist who murdered slaveholders in Kansas and Missouri (1856-1858) before his raid at Harpers Ferry (1859), hoping to incite a slave rebellion; he failed and was executed, but his martyrdom by northern abolitionists frightened the South.
416568580Pottawatomie CreekJohn Brown rode with 4 sons & 2 others to Pottawatomie Creek; dragged 5 proslavery settlers from beds and murdered them
416568581Charles Sumnergave a speech in may 1856 called " the Crime Against Kansas" militant opponent of slavery, beat with a cane by Preston Brooks after the speech, collapsed unconscious and couldn't return to senate for 4 years, symbol throughout the north.
416576849Preston BrooksResponsible for beating radical republican Charles Sumner with his cane
416576850Dred ScottA Missouri slave who had been taken north to work in free territory for several years. After he returned with his slaveholder to MIssouri, Scott sued to end his slavery arguing that living in free territory made him a free man. Supreme court ruled against Scott. Stating that he was not a U.S. citizen and that gave him no right to sue in federal court. And said that the 5th amendment protected slaveholders from being deprived of their property.
416576851Harper's Ferryplace where John Brown attacked a federal armory to steal weapons to fight slave owners
416576852Election of 1860Lincoln, the Republican candidate, won because the Democratic party was split over slavery. As a result, the South no longer felt like it has a voice in politics and a number of states seceded from the Union.
416576853Gag rule1835 law passed by Southern congress which made it illegal to talk of abolition or anti-slavery arguments in Congress
416576854Secessionthe withdrawal of eleven Southern states from the Union in 1860 which precipitated the American Civil War
416576855Jefferson Davisan American statesman and politician who served as President of the Confederate States of America for its entire history from 1861 to 1865
416576856Confederate States of Americaa republic formed in February of 1861 and composed of the eleven Southern states that seceded from the United States
416576857Fort SumterSite of the opening engagement of the Civil War. On December 20, 1860, South Carolina had seceded from the Union, and had demanded that all federal property in the state be surrendered to state authorities. Major Robert Anderson concentrated his units at Fort Sumter, and, when Lincoln took office on March 4, 1861, Sumter was one of only two forts in the South still under Union control. Learning that Lincoln planned to send supplies to reinforce the fort, on April 11, 1861, Confederate General Beauregard demanded Anderson's surrender, which was refused. On April 12, 1861, the Confederate Army began bombarding the fort, which surrendered on April 14, 1861. Congress declared war on the Confederacy the next day.
416576858Major Robert AndersonUnion army officer, who is known for his command of Fort Sumter at the start of the war.

APUSH Chapter 31 Flashcards

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63627381John. F. Kennedy 1960 Campaign and ElectionThe Democratic nominee in the 1960 election. He was a senetor from Massachusetts who had narrowly missed being the party's vice presidential canidate in 1956. His father was wealthy and a former American ambassador to Britian. He was a strong canidate who overcame doubts about his young age, and religion for he was catholic. He won the popularity barely with 49.9% and 303 to 219 electoral votes.
63627382Richard M. Nixon 1960 Campaign and ElectionRebublican nominee in the 1960 election. He was the vice president and for moderate reform. He was thought to be a shoe-in for presidency, but he barely lost the popular vote with 49.6% to Kennedy's 49.9%, also only 219 electoral votes to 303.
63627383The New FrontierIn kennedy's administration he had campaigned promising a set of domestic reform as he described as this.
63627384Lee Harvey OswaldA confused and embittered Marxist who was arrested for shooting Kennedy. He was mysteriously murdered by a Dallas nightclub owner, Jack Ruby. The Warren Commission report had said that these two were unrelated and didn't have anything do to with a larger conspiracy. Many Americans came to believe that the report had idnored evidence of a wider conspiracy behind the murders.
63627385Lyndon B. JohnsonKennedy's successor who was a native of west Texas, he was ambitous and had tried for the presidential nomination in 1960. He constructed a great reform program labeled "The Great Society." He won approval of much of it through his skillful lobbying in Congress.
63627386Barry GoldwaterRepublican nominee who was a very conservative senator in Arizona. IN the 1964 election he managed to recieved a large popularity of over 61 percent. However, he managed to only carry his home state and five other states in the deep south. Johnson ended up winning and was headed toward filling many of his goals.
63627387War on PovertyJohnson launched this only weeks after he took office. It;s centerpiece was the Office of Econmic Opportunity, which created an array of new educational, employment, housing, and health-care programs.
63627388Office of Economic OpportunityWas the center on Johnson's war on poverty. It created an array of new educational, employment, housing, and health-care programs.
63627389Housing Act of 1961Offered 4.9 billion in federal grants to cities for the preservation of open spaces, the development of mass-transit systems, and the subsidizing of middle-income housing.
63627390Department of Housing and Urban DevelopmentJohnson developed this new cabinet agency whose first secratary, John Weaver, was the first African American ever to serve in the cabinet.
63634076Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965Extended federal aid to private and parochial schools in addition to public schools and based the aid on the economic conditions of students rather than the need of the schools.
63634077Immigration Act of 1965This law maintained a strict limit on the number of newcomers admitted to the country every year, but it eliminated the national origins system established in the 1920s, which gave preference tp immigrants from northern Europe over those from other parts of the world.
63634078Woolworth Sit-inIn February 1960 when black college students in Greensboro, NC, staged a sit-in at a segregated Woolworth's lunch counter; and in the following months, such demonstrations spread.
63634079Student Nonviolent Cooridinating CommitteeSome of the kids who participated in the sit-ins formed this group, it was a student branch of Martin Luther King, Jr's Southern Christian Leadership Council. They worked to keep the spirit of resistance alive.
63634080Congress of Racial EqualityThis group worked with an interracial group of students to begin what they called "Freedom rides." Traveling by bus throughout the South, they tried to force the desegregation of bus stations. They were met with so much racial violence that the federal marshals had to be called out to keep the peace.
63634081Eugene Bull ConnorPolice Commissioner who personally supervised a brutal effort to break up the peacful marches, arrestion hundreds of demonstrators and using attack dogs, tear gas, electric cattle prods, and fires hoses in full view of television cameras.
63634082George WallaceGovernor of Alabama who stood in the doorway of a building at he University of Alabama to prevent the court-ordered enrollment of several black students.
63634083Medgar EversNAACP official who was murdered in Mississippi the same day Wallace was forced to allow black students in the University of Alabama.
63634084Birmingham BombingIn September 1963, this was the bombing of a black church that killed four African-American children.
63634085March on WashingtonTo generate support for the civil rights legistlation 200,000 demonstrators marched down the Mall in Washington D.C. in August 1963 and gathered before the Lincoln Memorial lfor the largest civil rights demonstration in the nation's history.
63634086Civil Rights Act of 1964Proposed by Kennedy in 1963 but was stalled in the Senate after having passed through the House of Representatives with relative case. It was finally passed by Senate and became the most important civil rights bill of the twentith century.
63634087Freedom SummerThe great civil rights movement in the summer of 1964. It produced a violent response from some southern whites. The first three freedom workers to arrive in the South were murdered, and the local law enforcment officials were involved in the crime.
63634088Andrew GoodmanA white along with Michael Schwerner, and one black, James Chaney who were the first to arrive in the South as freedom workers. They were murded by local law officials.
63634089Selma MarchA major demonstration organized by King in March 1965. It was to press for the right of blacks to register to vote.
63634090Voting Rights Act of 1965This provided federal protection to African Americans attemtpting to excercise their right to vote.
63634091Affirmative ActionLBJ gave his support to this concept in 1965. Over the next decade, these guidlines gradually extended to virtually all institutions ding business or recieving funds from the federal governemtn and to many others as well.
63634092Watts RiotIn the midst of a traffic arrest, a white police officer struck a protesting black bystander with his club. This incident triggered a storm of anger and a week of violence. 34 people died during the uprising, which eventually quelled by the national guard.
63634093Commission on Civil DisordersCreated by the president in response to the riots, issued a celebrated report in the spring of 1968 recommending massic spending to eliminate the abysmal conditions of the ghettoes.
63634094Black PowerSuggested a shift away from the goal of assimilation and toward increased awareness of racial distinctiveness.
63634095Black PanthersA revolutionary organization based in Oakland, California.
63826215Malcolm XThe most celebrated of black muslims. He died in 1965 when black gunmen, presumebly under orders from rivals within the Nation of Islam, assassinated him. He was originially for segregation, but after his trip to Mecca he wanted integration and spoke of the brotherhood of mankind.
63826216Green BeretsSpecial forces of soldiers who were trained specifically to fight guerrilla conflicts and other limited wars.
63826217Alliance for ProgressKennedy proposed this to prepare relationships with Latin America. It was a series of projects for peaceful development and stablization of the nations of that region.
63826218Fidel CastroThis man took over the dictator in Cuba and in-tern became the new dictator. Refugees from Cuba escaped to the United States and the CIA has been training them to send them back to Cuba to start a revolution and overthrow this man. When they were sent back they were given weapons and told air support would be coming. Kennedy pulled out at the last second and sent no air support. The mission was a failure and the United States was seen as weak. This was known as the Bay of Pigs.
63826219The Berlin WallWhen the Soviet Union demanded that the U.S. pull out of Berlin the U,S. refused and so the Soviet Union put this up separating East and West Berlin. It became the most prominant symbol of the Cold War.
63826220Cuban Missle CrisisIn the summer of 62 American intelligence became aware of Soviet technicians and equiptment in Cuba. Aerial Reconnaissance photos produced clear evidence that the Soviets had nuclear weapons on the island. Kennedy threatend two options, either the U.S. would hold a blockade of Cuba and the Soviets would remove the missles or the U.S. would bomb the construction site. The Soviet Union eventually gave in and removed the missles if the U.S. promised to not invade Cuba.
63826221Ngo Dinh DiemLeader of South Vietnam who had promised democracy but never actually followed through with it. Ho Chi Minh was the leader of North Vietnam and was a communist. The U.S. preffered Diem to Minh so they poured military assistance into South Vietnam. The Vietminh were the supporters of Ho Chi Minh who stayed behind in South Vietnam after the partition.
63826222National Liberation FrontCreated by the Vietminh in the South, it was known to many Americans as the Viet Cong. It was an organization closely allied with the northern Vietnamese government. In 1960, they began military operations in the South. This marked the begining of the Vietnam War.
63826223Gulf of Tonkin ResolutionAuthorized the president to "take all necessary measures" to protect American forces and "prevent further aggression" in Southeast Asia.
63826224Attrition strategyThe belief that the United States could inflict more damage on the enemy than the enemy could absorb. This strategy failed because the North Vietnamese were willing to commit many more soldiers and resources to the conflict than the United Stateshad predicted.
63826225PacificationAnother American stategy whose purpose was to push the Viet Cong from particular regions and then "pacify" those regions by winning the "hearts and minds" of the people.
63826226J. William FulbrightA Senator from Arkansas that was the chariman of the Foreign Relations Committee. He turned against the war and in January 1966 he began to stage highly publicized and occasionally televised congresssional hearings to air criticisms of it.
63826227Robert F. KennedyJFK's brother who was a Senator from New York who agreed with Fulbright and was against Johnson's policies.
63826228Robert McNamaraHad done much to help ectend the American involvment in the war, he quickly left the government in 1968.
63826229The Tet OffensiveA large attack by communist forces on American strongholds throughout Vietnam taking place on January 31, 1968 in which a few cities fell to communist forces. This offensive revealed to many Americans the brutality of the fighting in Vietnam as it was documented through television and photographs. Although this was a military victory for the United States, it significantly hindered the Johnson administration.
63826230Eugene McCarthyDemocrat from Minnesota, challenged LBJ for presidential nomination 1968, intellectual, Catholic, opposed to Vietnam War, appealed to youth.
63826231James Earl RayMartin Luther King's assassin who was captured two months after the assassination in London. He had no apparent motive.
63826232Sirhan Sirhanassassinated Robert Kennedy in 1968; he was a young Palestinian he was apparently enraged by Kennedy's pro- Israeli policy. He shot Robert in the head amongst a crowd.
638262331968 Democratic ConventionHeld in a hotel in Chicago where delegates voted down a peace resolution and seemed ready to nominate John's former vice, Hubert Humphrey, when protesters gathered for a rally outside. Police beat/arrested them to break up the crowd as the violence was caught on film. The Democrats still elected Humphrey.
638262341968 ElectionOn November 5, 1968, the Republican nominee, former Vice President Richard Nixon won the election over the Democratic nominee, Vice President Hubert Humphrey. The election also featured a strong third party effort by former Alabama Governor George Wallace. Because Wallace's campaign promoted segregation, he proved to be a formidable candidate in the South; no third-party candidate has won an entire state's electoral votes since.

Mirror For Humanity Chp 1-4 Flashcards

cultural anthropology exam 1

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463351787Black English Vernacular (BEV)A rule-governed dialect of American English with roots in southern English. BEV is spoken by African American youth and by many adults in their casual, intimate speech-sometimes called ebonics
463351788call systemsSystems of communication among nonhuman primates, composed of a limited number of sounds that vary in intensity and duration. Tied to environmental stimuli.
463351791descriptive linguisticsThe scientific study of a spoken language, including its phonology, morphology, lexicon, and syntax.
463351793displacementA linguistic capacity that allows humans to talk about things and events that are not present.
463351794focal vocabularyA set of words and distinctions that are particularly important to certain groups (those with particular foci of experience or activity), such as types of snow to Eskimos or skiers.
463351796kinesicsThe study of communication through body movements, stances, gestures, and facial expressions.
463351797lexiconVocabulary; a dictionary containing all the morphemes in a language and their meaning.
463351798morphologyThe study of form; used in linguistics (the study of morphemes and word construction) and for form in general-for example, biomorphology relates to physical form.
463351799phonemeSignificant sound contrast in a language that serves to distinguish meaning, as in minimal pairs.
463351800phonemicsThe study of the sound contrasts (phonemes) of a particular language.
463351801phoneticsThe study of speech sounds in general; what people actually say in various languages.
463351802phonologyThe study of sounds used in speech.
463351803productivityThe ability to use the rules of one's language to create new expressions comprehensible to other speakers; a basic feature of language.
463351805Sapir-Whorf hypothesisTheory that different languages produce different ways of thinking.
463351806semanticsA language's meaning system.
463351807sociolinguisticsStudy of relationships between social and linguistic variation; study of language in its social context.
463351810syntaxThe arrangement and order of words in phrases and sentences.
463351812cultural consultantSomeone the ethnographer gets to know in the field, who teaches him or her about their society and culture, aka informant.
463351813emicThe research strategy that focuses on native explanations and criteria of significance.
463351814eticThe research strategy that emphasizes the observer's rather than the natives' explanations, categories, and criteria of significance.
463351815genealogical methodProcedures by which ethnographers discover and record connections of kinship, descent, and marriage, using diagrams and symbols.
463351818key cultural consultantsAn expert on a particular aspect of local life who helps the ethnographer understand that aspect.
463351820longitudinal researchLong-term study of a community, society, culture, or other unit, usually based on repeated visits.
463351821participant observationA characteristic ethnographic technique; taking part in the events one is observing, describing, and analyzing.
463351823sampleA smaller study group chosen to represent a larger population.
463351826acculturationthe exchange of cultural features that results when groups come into continuous firsthand contact; the original cultural patterns of either or both groups may be altered, but the groups remain distinct.
463351827core valuesKey, basic, or central values that integrate a culture and help distinguish it from others.
463351828cultural relativismThe position that the values and standards of cultures differ and deserve respect.
463351829cultural rightsDoctrine that certain rights are vested not in individuals but in identifiable groups, such as religious and ethnic minorities and indigenous societies.
463351830diffusionBorrowing between cultures either directly or through intermediaries
463351831enculturationThe social process by which culture is learned and transmitted across the generations.
463351832ethnocentrismThe tendency to view one's own culture as best and to judge the behavior and beliefs of culturally different people by one's own standards.
463351837human rightsDoctrine that invokes a realm of justice and morality beyond and superior to particular countries, cultures, and religions. Human rights, usually seen as vested in individuals, would include the right to speak freely, to hold religious beliefs without persecution, and not to be enslaved. *Marriage shall be entered into only with the free and full consent of the intending spouses. (article 16, #2)
463351844symbolSomething, verbal or non-verbal, that arbitrarily and by convention stands for something else, with which it has no necessary or natural connection.
463351846adaptationthe process by which organisms cope with environmental stresses
463351847anthropologythe study of the human species and its immediate ancestors
463351848applied anthropologythe application of anthropological data, perspectives, theory, and methods to identify, assess, and solve contemporary social problems
463351849archaeological anthropologyThe branch of anthropology that reconstructs, describes, and interprets human behavior and cultural patterns through material remains; best known for the study of prehistory. Also known as "archaeology."
463351851biological (or physical) anthropologyThe branch of anthropology that studies human biological diversity over time and space-for instance, hominid evolution, human genetics, human biological adaptation; also includes primatology (behavior and evolution of monkeys and apes). Also called physical anthropology
463351852cultural anthropologyThe study of human society and culture; describes, analyzes, interprets, and explains social and cultural similarities and differences.
463351854culturethat complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, arts, morals, law, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by [humans] as a member of society. *learned, symbolic, shared, all-encompassing, integrated.
463351855ethnographyField work in a particular culture
463351856ethnologyThe theoretical, comparative study of society and culture; compares cultures in time and space
463351859holisticInterested in the whole of human condition past, present, and future; biology, society, language, and culture.
463351860linguistic anthropologyThe branch of anthropology that studies linguistic variation in time and space. including interrelations between language and culture; includes historical linguistics and sociolinguistics.
463351861natural selectionOriginally formulated by Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace; the process by which nature selects the forms most fit to survive and reproduce in a given environment, such as the tropics.
463351865sociolinguisticsStudy of relationships between social and linguistic variation; study of language in its social context.
463515523Types of Field Workjournals, photos, videos, artifacts, field notes
463515524Types of Biasethnocentrism and incomplete view (gender limitations, teamwork necessary for adequate perspective)
463515525world viewthe way the world really is based on our ethos (the way we think we should live in the world)

brain structure&processes first 3 lessons Flashcards

First three lessons

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152114199Central Nervous System (CNS)A major division of the nervous system consisting of all nerves in the brain and spinal cord
152114200Peripheral Nervous System (PNS)A major division consisting of all nerves outside the CNS; transmits sensory info towards the CNS, transmits motor messages from brain to rest of body
152114201Somatic Nervous SystemDivision of PNS that transmits sensory info towards the CNS
152114202Autonomic Nervous System (ANS)Division of PNS that transmits motor messages from the brain to the body's internal organs and glands
152114204Sympathetic Nervous SystemBranch of the ANS that alters activity level of internal muscles, organs and glands to prepare our body physically during emotional or physical arousal
152114206Parasympathetic Nervous SystemBranch of ANS that maintains our energy level for normal bodily functioning and physically calms us down after high arousal
152114208HomeostasisThe body's balanced and healthy state
152114210Cognitive ProcessesBrain processes of thinking, knowing or mentally manipulating info
152114212SensationThe response in the brain caused by excitation of a sensory organ
152114214CerebrumTwo larger hemispheres in the upper part of the brain
152114215Cerebral CortexThin layer of tissue that is the outer layer of the brain
152114217Frontal LobeThe upper half of each hemisphere; associated with complex mental abilities and the control of voluntary movement
152114219Primary Motor CortexArea of the frontal lobe that directs the body's skeletal muscles and controls voluntary movements
152114221Broca's areaArea in the left frontal lobe that controls muscles responsible for production of speech
152114222Parietal LobeLocated behind the frontal lobe; mostly associated with processing sensations but involved in the coordination of senses and movement
152114224Primary Somatosensory CortexNeurons located at the front of the parietal lobe, registers and processes sensory info from receptors in the body
152114226Temporal LobeLocated on either side of each cerebral hemisphere; associated with processing auditory info, memory, facial recognition, object identification and emotion
152114228Primary Auditory CortexArea of the temporal lobes that registers and processes auditory (sound) info
152114229Wernicke's AreaArea of left temporal lobe responsible for the comprehension of language and the formulation of meaningful sentences
152114231Occipital LobeLocated at the back of each hemisphere; associated with processing visual info
152114233Primary Visual CortexArea at the base of occipital lobe that registers, processes and interprets visual info sent form each eye
152114235Corpus CallosumThink band of nerve fibers in the middle of the brain that connects the left and right hemispheres together and helps the hemispheres to process info together

US History Unit 1 Colonies Flashcards

OCCC
Prof Carlisle
US History 1

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4663004876. Columbian Exchange = exchange between New World & Europea. European items brought to America i. Domesticated animals = horse, cattle, sheep, pigs, goats ii. Grains = wheat, rye, barley, oats, rice iii. Other foods & plants = melons, coffee, dandelions, sugar, & olives iv. Disease = measles, chicken/small pox, whooping cough b. Native items taken to Europe i. Food = corn, beans, squash, pumpkins, potatoes, sweet potatoes, tomatoes, peppers, peanuts ii. Drugs = tobacco, cocaine, & quinine iii. Cotton iv. Disease = VD syphilis c. Impact i. Negative on Natives = disease ii. Positive on Europe = new food crops increase population
4663004887. Amerigo Vespuccia. Explorer who never lead expedition b. Drew maps of everywhere he had been c. Gave maps to German cartographer to reproduce d. German cartographer realized he found new world & named it America
4663004898. Prince Henry the Navigatora. Founded school of navigation in Portugal b. Place to share knowledge
4663004909. Roanokea. 1st attempt at English settlement b. 100 settlers (1585) c. 6 months later all went back to England d. 1587 a different group went back with 1 year supplies e. Spanish Armada (1588) delayed supply ships f. Supply ship arrives 1590 & found no one i. Possible assimilated with Natives or died off ii. Word "Croatan" carved in a tree
46630049110. Sir Francis Drakea. Captured Spanish treasure fleet (ships with a year's worth of gold heading back to Spain) b. 2nd to circumnavigate globe
46630049211. Sea dogsa. Semi legitimate pirates, English b. Kept Sapin out of Roanoke area
46630049312. Spanish Armadaa. Drake captured Spanish treasure fleet b. Spain retaliated by attempting England attack c. Spain defeated by loss of ships due to weather d. Started decline of Spainas world power e. Opened New World exploration to other countries
46630049413. Three G'sa. Gold = any way to make money i. French = furs ii. English = tobacco iii. Spanish = gold b. Glory = 2 levels i. Personal ii. National c. God i. Escape religious persecution - War btwn Protestants & Catholics in Europe ii. Convert natives & save souls
46630049514. London (Virginia) Companya. Settled Jamestown Colony
46630049615. Jamestowna. 1st successful English colony b. Corporate colony ran by Virginia Co of London c. Established to make money for company d. 1st ship = 100 men, 2/3 gentlemen, 1/3 unskilled i. No leader just a council of 7 e. 2nd ship = 120 more men & no supplies f. Not successful - 10,000 went there, only 1000 left in 1624 g. Changed to Royal colony in 1624
46630049716. John Smitha. Jamestown colonist b. Member of council of 7 c. Survivalist d. Did 2 things to help Jamestown survive i. No work/no food rule ii. Made peace w/Powhatan Indians (Pocahontas)
46630049817. John Rolfea. Turned Jamestown into a successful colony b. Brought tobacco as a crop c. Married Pocahontas to bring peace
46630049918. Indentured servantsa. Someone who works for a period of time to pay off a debt b. 2 types i. Voluntary = work for 7 years & get a plot of land ii. Involuntary = kidnapped
46630050019. 3 types of coloniesa. Royal b. Corporate c. Proprietary
46630050120. Royal Colonya. Ran & owned by King
46630050221. Corporate Colonya. Ran & owned by a company
46630050322. Proprietary Colonya. Ran & owned by a group of people
46630050423. Plymoutha. 2nd colony b. Corporate colony i. Company to make $$ to send themselves to America c. Puritans
46630050524. Anglican Churcha. King Henry VIII broke from Catholic church & formed Anglican church in England
46630050625. Puritansa. Separatists (pilgrims) b. Radical fringe who believed Anglican church was so corrupt it couldn't be fixed c. Wanted to separate from Anglican Church & start over d. Formed Plymouth Co to make $$ to send selves to America e. Founded Plymouth colony
46630050726. Pilgrims (Separatists)a. Same as above
46630050827. Squantoa. Indian who helped Plymouth colonists
46630050928. Massachusetts Bay Companya. Founded Massachusetts Bay colony b. Mainstream Puritans who stayed behind to try to fix the church, figured out they couldn't fix it so went to America to build the best church ever c. Beacon on the Hill = build the perfect church to enlighten the world
46630051029. Thomas Hookera. Broke away from Mass Bay Colony to form Connecticut b. Did not believe that only church people could serve in govt
46630051130. Roger Williamsa. Broke away from Mass Bay Colony to form Rhode Island b. Believed you should buy land from the Indians
46630051231. New Yorka. Only colony not originally founded by the English b. Founded by Dutch who called it New Netherlands c. Mostly interested in fur trade i. Dutch would get furs traded from Indians before Indians could make it to the English colonies d. Anglo-Dutch wars i. English invaded and captured New Netherlands ii. Renamed all of the major cities to English names like New York iii. Told people they could stay as long as they switched loyalties to England
46630051332. Pennsylvaniaa. Proprietary colony b. founded by William Penn c. haven for Quakers d. anyone could go as long as they believed in God e. closest you could get to religious freedom f. treated Indians fairly g. one of the largest colonies by early 1700's
46630051433. William Penna. Proprietor of Pennsylvania colony b. Member of Quakers ("Society of Friends") c. King gave him this colony in honor of Penn's father's accomplishments
46630051534. Quakers (Society of Friends)a. Perceived as radicals b. Believed that everyone (men, women, children, black, white) has a piece of God within them i. All equal in the eyes of God c. Dressed strangely -- drab colors, should not stand out because we are all the same d. Anti-slavery -- believed everyone was equal so slaves were equal and should not be enslaved e. Allowed women to speak in church f. Spoke strangely i. Used "thee" & "thou", the informal version of "you" ii. Never used the formal version of "you" g. Pacifists -- didn't like war, did not support their country's wars, seen as cowards or friends of the enemy
46630051635. Marylanda. Ran by George Calvert b. Proprietary colony c. Haven for Catholics who were being persecuted n England d. 1st proprietary colony
46630051736. Carolinasa. Proprietary colony b. Owned by several proprietors c. One of the later colonies so proprietors wanted to grow quickly i. Took colonists from Barbados & transplanted to Carolina - Planted sugar but didn't grow - Tried to sell Indians as slaves to Barbados but Indians died of disease or would not work ii. Next tried ranching...didn't work iii. Tried rice & indigo after 30 years d. Proprietors focused only on area around Charleston i. Ppl in N Carolina area did not want to pay taxes to Charleston ii. Proprietors separated colony into N & S and focused on Charleston e. In 1719 both colonies became Royal colonies because proprietors did not want to pay to help with Indian problems 37. Georgia a. Last colony founded b. Proprietary i. several proprietors ii. James Oglethorp most involved c. Main purpose for settling was altruism i. Altruism = do things for the good of others, selfless ii. Remove the poor from prisons in England & ship them to Georgia, give them land and new life iii. Named after King George iv. Furthest south colony to act as a barrier to military attacks from Spanish v. No proprietor was to make money vi. Wanted to produce silk d. 4 requirements to live in GA i. Anyone could go to GA but could not own any more than 500 acres ii. Could not lease any of your land to someone else & had to work it yourself iii. No slaves...should be able to work the land yourself iv. No alcohol e. Did not work out as planned i. No silk - Planted wrong mulberry trees - Silkworms starved and died ii. Helping the poor? - Interviewed the poor in prison but couldn't find many who were poor due to bad luck and not due to laziness iii. The requirements turned away many people f. The restrictions were removed one by one to try to get more people to move there g. Once all restrictions were removed, the proprietors gave it back to the King
46630051838. James Oglethorpea. Most involved proprietor of Georgia colony

AP Biology Flash Cards Flashcards

Words that would be helpful to know for the Ap Biology test

Terms : Hide Images
555735736atom(physics and chemistry) the smallest component of an element having the chemical properties of the element
555735737protonpositively charged particle of an atom
555735738neutronan elementary particle with 0 charge and mass about equal to a proton
555735739electronnegatively charged particle; located outside the atomic nucleus
555735740Ground StateThe lowest energy state of an atom. opposite of excited state
555735750Excited StateA state in which an atom has more energy than it does at its ground state. In photosynthesis, electron reaches this state after being hit by light
555735751Isotopesatoms of the same element with a different number of neutrons. chlorine: 18 neutrons + 17 protons = chlorine - 35 Chlorine: 20 neutrons + 17 protons = chlorine - 37
555735752Ionic bondswhen one atom gives one or more electrons to another atom. This gives one atom a positive charge and the other a negative charge, making them attract to each other
555735768Covalent BondsTwo or more non-metals who share electrons to make full valance shells
555735769CationUsually elements (ions) with a positive charge
555735770Anionnon-metal elements (ions) with a negative charge
555735771Non polarMolecules without an electrical charge, like lipids, that do not dissolve in water.
555735772Polarwhen opposite ends of a molecule have opposite charges. ex: water
555735773hydrophobicsomething that isn't attracted to water (cannot dissolve in it)
555735774hydrophilicsomething that is really attracted to water (can dissolve in it) ex: salt or towels
555735775hydrogen bondinga weak bond that forms when a hydrogen atom covalently bonds with a negatively charged atom and is also attracted to another negatively charged atom. Helps things adhere to each other ex: Water molecules
555735776Universal Solventwater, the one solvent that can dissolve almost anything
555735777Cohesionthe binding together of similar molecules either in liquids or solids. ex: Water w/ hydrogen bonds
555735778*adhesionthe attraction, or clinging, between different kinds of molecules. ex: water molecules to the inner walls of plants
555735779*transpirationtal pullwhen the water in leaves of plants evaporates, then the cohesion between the water molecules cause it to rise upwards from the roots.
555735780*Capillary Actiona.k.a: capillarity. the ability of a liquid to flow in narrow spaces without the assistance of and in opposition to external forces like gravity ex: like how water can rise up on paper when it gets wet.
555735781*Surface tensionthe measure of how difficult it is to stretch or break the surface of a lipid, or the tightness across the surface of water that is caused by the polar molecules pulling on one another
555735782pHa value that indicated the acidity or alkalinity of a solution on a scale of 0-14, based on the proportion of H+ ions.
555735783Bufferssubstances that cause a solution to resist changes in pH ex: H2CO3, can either turn to a base when rise in pH or an acid when drop in pH
555735784Isomerscompounds that have the same # of atoms and elements, but have different structures and different properties. ex: One pentane structure can be straight while the other can be branched.
555735785Structural Isomersdiffer in covalent arrangements of the atoms or double bonds. The bigger the carbon skeleton, the more possible isomers can be created
555735786Geometric IsomersHave the same bonds, but in different positions. if there is a double bond of two elements, and then 2 different atoms attached to the elements, then it is possible cis- on same side trans- different sides
555735787*Enantiomersmolecules that are mirror images of each other. ex: Carbons can attract 4 different molecules, they can be arranged in 2 different ways. one is usually active and the other inactive
555735788Carbohydratesthe organic compound that is the main source of energy for the body, has sugars and starch. Can also be used for structural support in plants or insects
555735789Lipidsthe organic compound that is made of 3 fatty acid chains and 1 glycerol. Used as a protective water-proof coating and a reserved energy source
555735790Proteinsan organic compound that can be acquired through eating meat, eggs, beans, etc. Help the body fight diseases, build bone and muscle, and control the rate of reactions (enzymes)
555735791Nucleic Acidstores and transmits genetic DNA and RNA. Organic compound in the body made up of nucleotides
555735792Monosaccharidesthe monomers of carbohydrates; simple sugars Ex: glucose, sugar, fruit, candy
555735793dissacharides- two simple sugars (monomers) bound together by dehydration reaction. Immediate energy source ex: Sucrose & Lactose
555735794dehydration synthesiswhen monomers begin to connect to each other and in order to do that they drop their water molecule. Add monomers to polymers ex: HO - O - O - O -H HO- O - H H2O HO-O-O-O-O-H
555735795hydrolysisthe opposite of dehydration reaction. breaks down polymers to monomers by adding a water molecule to break the bond. ex: HO-O-O-O-O-H H2O HO - O - O - O -H HO- O - H
555735796saturated fatty acidno double bonds between the carbon atoms in the chain and as many hydrogen atoms can be attached. Room temp. the molecules are tightly together. ex: Butter
555735797unsaturated fatty acidhas 1 or more double bonds between carbon b/c some hydrogen atoms were removed. Room temp: Liquid ex: oil
555735798steroidslipids that help make cholesterol & testosterone, helps regulate the immune system, and can help increase muscle and bone mass. Has a 4 ring carbon
555735799Peptide bondthe covalent bond the forms between 2 amino acid molecules.
555735800PolymerMany monomers; a long chain of monomers bonded together
555735801monomera single, building block molecule. Can make polymers
555735802dipeptide2 amino acids bonded together by a peptide bond
555735803*conformationThe specific three dimensional arrangement of atoms in a molecule, general structure
555735804chaperone proteinsCommon in the E.R., proteins that help newly made proteins fold into their supposed shape
555735805quaternary structureThe fourth level of protein structure; the shape resulting from the association of two or more polypeptide subunits.
555735806tertiary structure3rd level: Specific globular structure; chain folding again to make the 3-D shape of a protein
555735807secondary structureThe second level of protein structure; the regular local patterns of coils or folds of a polypeptide chain. Regional
555735808primary structureThe first level of protein structure; the specific sequence of amino acids making up a polypeptide chain.
555735809DNAa long double helix molecule made up of nucleotides that carries the genetic information for the body. has instructions on how to make proteins that make up traits and can make copies of itself so can be passed down
555735810RNAa single stranded molecule. mRNA: carries a copy of instructions on how to make a kind of protein tRNA: helps transfer amino acids to the ribosomes rRNA: part of the ribosomes
555735811Nucleotidethe monomers for nucleic acids that is made up of a 5-carbon sugar, a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base
555735812Functional Groupsthe components of organic molecules that are most commonly involved in chemical reactions ex: Hydroxyl, carboxyl, amino, etc
555735813*photophosphorylationThe process of generating ATP from ADP and phosphate by means of a proton-motive force generated by the thylakoid membrane of the chloroplast during the light reactions of photosynthesis
555735814*cyclic photophosphorylationuses Photosystem 1, not PS 2, in order to create ATP. Pathway in which excited electrons from chlorophyll are used to generate ATP without the splitting of water or reduction of NADP
555735815calvin cycleIn photosynthesis, also known as Light Independent reactions. Occurs in the stroma of the Chloroplast, the end result is sugar that the cell can use.
555735816carbon fixationtransfer of CO2 to organic compounds. In the Calvin Cycle, when a carbon molecule is combined to RuBP using the enzyme rubisco creating a 6 carbon molecule. then splits to 2 3-carbon molecules
555735817rubiscothe enzyme that catalyzes the reaction between RuBP and CO2 and results in a 6 carbon molecule
555735818RuBPA 5 carbon sugar that is used in the Calvin Cycle.
555735819*c-3 Plantsplants in which the Calvin cycle uses carbon dioxide directly with Rubisco and makes 3 carbon molecules from them.
555735820*Photorespirationwhen CO2 levels inside plant cells are low due to dry hot temp. & there is a lot of excess O2, produces CO2 & no ATP or sugar
555735821peroixsomesan organelle in cells that digest fatty acids, break down toxic things, and can help digest alcohol.
555735822*c-4 Photosynthesismodification of C-3 photosynthesis adapted for dry environments. Uses enzyme PEP carboxylase to be more efficient w/ bringing CO2 to the Calvin Cycle instead of O2. Carbon fixation and the Calvin cycle occur in different cells ex: Corn
555735823*Cam plantsCarbon fixation and the Calvin Cycle occur at different times of the day. Pores close during the day to conserve water and can carry out photosyn. w/ light present. Same process as in C-4 photosynthesis ex: Pineapples or cacti
555735824mitosisAfter interphase, the process in which the nucleus divides into two, having the same number of chromosomes in each, and the cell splits
555735825meiosisthe process of making gametes.
555735826sister chromatidsReplicated forms of a chromosome joined together by the centromere (mid part) and eventually separated during mitosis or meiosis II
555735827ATPthe energy source of the cell to use to do work
555735828Glycolysisa linear process in which glucose is converted to 2 3-carbon molecules called G3P and then goes through a series of reactions to make 2 pyruvate molecules. Makes 4 ATP and 2 NADH total (not counting those lost)
555735829Alcohol Fermentationa.k.a: Ethanol. the process in which the molecule pyruvate releases CO2 w/ decarboxlase and then 2 H+ are added w/ dehydrogenase, making ethanol
555735830lactic acid fermentationthe process in which a pyruvate molecule gets 2 H+ molecules added to it w/ the enzyme dehydrogenase, making it lactic acid
555735831electron transport chaina group of proteins that help transport high energy electrons in the mitochondria and chloroplast and can be used to make ATP
555735832oxidative phosphorylationthe 3rd process in cellular respiration, results in the synthesis of ATP through H+ moving away from its concentration gradient in the inter-membrane space to the matrix
555735833Krebs Cyclestage of cellular respiration that finishes the breakdown of pyruvic acid molecules to carbon dioxide, releasing energy
555735834Substrate Level Phosphorylationwhen an enzyme transfers a phosphate group from a substrate molecule to ADP, making ATP
555735835*Allosteric enzymean enzyme involved in the regulation of cell processes. Activators keep the enzyme working by forming it's site. Inhibitors keep the enzyme inactive when it is not in use
555735836*PKF...
555735837*Faculative Anaerobesorganisms that can make ATP using either fermentation or cellular respiration ex; our muscles and some bacteria
555735838*Obligate Anaerobesorganisms that cannot use O2 for anything and is poisoned by it. live on fermentation.
555735839Oxaloacetic acida 4 carbon molecule that combines w/ a pyruvate molecule (w/o 1 carbon) to make a 6 carbon molecule called citrate in the Krebs Cycle
555735840NADHthe reduced form of NAD+; a common electron-carrying molecule that functions in cellular respiration
555735841CristaeInfolding of the inner membrane of a mitochondria that houses the election transport chain and the enzyme catalyzing the synthesis of ATP.
555735842Matrixthe space inside the mitochondria where the Krebs Cycle and part of Oxidative Phosphorylation takes place
555735843Chemiosmosisin chloroplasts and mitochondria, a process in which the movement of protons down their concentration gradient across a membrane is coupled to the synthesis of ATP
555735844reductionWhen an empty electron carrier gets 2 electrons and becomes full
555735845oxidationwhen an electron carrier loses its electrons and becomes empty.
555735846*cytochromesAn iron-containing protein, a component of electron transport chains in mitochondria and chloroplasts.
555735847ATP Synthasethe protein that captures the energy of H+ as it travels through it in order to make ATP from ADP and a phosphate.
555735848Photosynthesisthe process in which a plant uses water and CO2 in the presence of sunlight to create sugar and Oxygen. 6 CO2 + 6 H2O -----> C6H12O6 + 6 O2
555735849Light dependent reactionthe 1st series of reactions that require sunlight in order to perform. The end products are reduced electron carriers and ATP which are then used in Light independent reactions.
555735850Light independent reactionthe 2nd serious of reactions that do not require sunlight, but ATP and electrons from electron carriers. The end products are 6 carbon sugar for the plant, ADP + P, and oxidized electron carriers
555735851Chlorophyllthe place where photosynthesis takes place. Has a green pigment shown on leaves.
555735852*CarotenoidsAn accessory pigment, either yellow or orange, in the chloroplasts of plants. By absorbing wavelengths of light that chlorophyll cannot, it broadens the spectrum of colors that can drive photosynthesis. Also protects plans from excessive light that can cause damage
555735853*Antenna Pigmentsall other pigments in photosystem that capture photon energy and funnel it to reaction center
555735854granaIn the chloroplast, made up of a lot of thykloids
555735855stromathe space inside the chloroplast where granas and thykloids are located. Light independent reactions (or Calvin Cycle) occurs here
555735856ThylakoidsIn the Chloroplast, a flattened membrane space where light dependent reactions takes place.
555735857Photosystem 1the second part of light dependent reactions. When light hits here, electron gets excited and moves through ETC until gets accepted by an empty electron carrier. Electron carrier then travels to the stroma.
555735858photosystem 2the first part of light dependent reactions. When light hits this chloroplast, then an electron gets excited and moved through electron transport chain to PS1. Also here where H2O is broken up so PS2 can get electron back.
555735859*Reaction centerThe chlorophyll a molecule and the primary electron acceptor in a photosystem; they trigger the light reactions of photosynthesis. The chlorophyll donates an electron, excited by light energy, to the primary electron acceptor, which passes an electron to an electron transport chain.
555735860*Noncyclicnot having repeated cycles

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