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base A solution that has a pH greater than 7; capable of reducing the amount of acid in a substance
Ãâó: www.planetpals.com/ecodictionary.html
base pair One unit of DNA composed of two complementary nucleic acid molecules (nucleotides) on opposing strands of DNA. The base adenosine always pairs with thymidine; the base guanidine pairs with cytidine.
Ãâó: ucbiotech.org/glossary/
base pair two complementary nucleotides in a piece of DNA joined together by a chemical link. The complementary base pairs are: adenine and thymine; guanine and cytosine.
Ãâó: www.biotechshares.com/glossary.htm
base line An arbitrarily selected initial point determined by field survey along a parallel; also called a Geographer's line (as surveyors were known as geographers); township lines were established north and south of the base line
Ãâó: www3.newberry.org/k12maps/glossary/
bases The molecular building blocks of DNA and RNA: adenine, cytosine, guanine, thymine, and (in RNA only) uracil. In DNA, A attaches only to T, and C attaches only to G. In RNA, A attaches only to U, and C attaches only to G.
Ãâó: www.exploratorium.edu/genepool/glossary.html
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