@@kanzu3074 yes lol My teacher was like "My drawing is bad,but hope you understand" Me, *IN My BRAINE* : ummm...sir I already understood it anyway,you Said this a billion times already,why are you drawing 😣😟" Lol seriously exactly what I thought at that time
There is something about microbiology teachers that none of them can clearly draw or explain to a class the differences and relationships between DNA, genes, allels, chromosomes,...etc. And the more a student asks for further clarification, the more messy and vague the teacher's explanation becomes. And even worse are psychology teachers who are generally unable to clearly define their terms and mark the differences between such concepts as feelings and emotions, consciousness and mind, thought and awareness, intelligence and intellect,...etc. And teachers seem more muddle headed and inarticulate nowadays than they were several decades ago. It is concerning.
A rare example of science communication that sequentially unfolds only the relevant information in a simple, yet accurate, manner, targeted to the audience level. The visual hooks are always reinforcing the underlying concept (rather than distracting from it). The learning gradient and concept ladder are elegantly structured and paced to draw the audience comfortably through increasing levels of understanding. Great work.
Hi! All scientific evidence to date indicates that life can come only from previously existing life. To believe that even a “simple “ living cell arose by chance from nonliving chemicals requires a huge leap of faith. What do you think?
your a teacher and i have a question that has been bugging me and it isnt anywhere on the internet! are there 23 chromosomes in the human body all together or 23 in each cell.
Very informative for the already familiar to the basics of DNA 🧬 but a bit too fast in explanation for the people who have no prior knowledge of workings of the DNA and related topics.
I'm going to show this video to my biology class. You explain it very well. However, I wish you would not describe cell division as "reproducing". This is misleading and may confuse students who may already have the misconception that reproducing and cell division are the same thing. Other than that, this is a great video. Thanks for uploading.
And by releasing this video stated clearly have completed its yearly quota of releasing videos on RUclips for this year come back next year for new video!
Ah, this was the video that helped me last year understand chromosome structure better. I got a good mark on my bio exam with thanks to this video. Coming back one year later to revise xD
This is so fascinating to me. I try to learn as much as I possibly can about chromosomes due to the fact that my daughter has 2 extremely rare chromosome mutations, she has 16p13.11 microduplication and 14q23.3q24.1 duplication too
@Hamish Channel No, down syndrome is a duplication of chromosome 21 aka Trisomy 21. My daughter has not got any duplications on chromosome 21, my auntie however does have down syndrome
Hmm I thought an organism's entire DNA was contained in a single continuous molecule/thread and during cell division, this single thread split down the middle to create two halves. That's what I thought after hearing statements like "If you unfolded your entire DNA, it'd stretch out to the moon" and "scientists have sequenced the human genome". I'm really struggling to reconcile these seemingly contradictory "one single chain" vs "many discrete chains" paradigms. Could someone help me out here?
Can't mutations also happen during your entire lifetime? I guess they mostly only matter to evolution if they happen early enough in development to make it into your gonad cells (so you can then pass it on to your offspring). But i guess it's still possible for a mutation to occur to JUST a relevant gonad cell, which then produces/becomes a mutated sperm or egg cell. This could happen any time in your life, even during adulthood, but it probably won't effect your life coz it's just one cell (unless it grows into a cancer).
Yes, they happen every day but don't ever make it to dominate your body unless they happen super early. Any mutation, early or late, that happens in the germ line, can make it into sperm and thus, effect evolution.
2:50 well actually the mother cells are the ones that decide how those cells will be produced for each part of the body.. sometimes you get mutations which lead to diseases as the mother cell no longer has the proper "source code" to compile the cell; Hence, stem cell therapy! Awesome video, thanks!
*Can somebody please explain me:-* That Gene is a piece of dna that codes for protein and determines a particular phenotype but how can *each cell have same kind of genes which all code for height, complexion , eye colour etc ...* OR does each cell have 23 pairs of chromosomes that no matter what the cell is... **IT MAY A DUMB DOUBT BUT PLEASE CLEAR IT CAUSE IAM REALLY STUCK AT THIS**
I am just finishing up Siddhartha Mukherjee's excellent book The Gene: An Intimate History. The only thing that could have made that book better is the kind of visual models you provide here. Very, very well done.
Thanks for doing this, understanding of biology is crucial for so many other fields of science, from medicine, population dynamics all the way to ecology (and more of course).
Thank you for producing this wonderfully helpful video! I am studying for my general curriculum MTEL and your explanation of chromosomes has saved my sanity.
وعد الآخرة النسبة الثابتة ** وليقول الذين في قلوبهم مرض والكافرون ماذا اراد الله بهذا مثلا كذلك يضل الله من يشاء ويهدي من يشاء وما يعلم جنود ربك الا هو وما هي إلا ذكرى للبشر **(٣١) المدثر ٣،١٤٢٨٥٧١٤٢٩ النسبة (١) إلى(٣) في تحديد السنة الكبيسه حيث كل (٤) سنوات تكون فيها سنة واحدة ضمن التسلسل الفردي عدد ايام شهر شباط فيها مكون من (٢٩) يوم ،اما السنوات الثلاثه فيكون فيها شهر شباط مكون من (٢٨) يوم وبنفس النسبة لزوج الكروموسومات الانثويه الجنسية( xx) وزوج الكروموسومات الجنسية في الذكر (xy) حيث أن هذه الكروموسومات الاربعه المشتركه في عملية احتمالية التكاثر وتكوين الامشاج التي تتحد لتكوين شريط كروموسومي جديد للمولود فإذا كان(y ) من الذكر و(x) من الأنثى كان المولود ذكر (xy) اما اذا كلاهما اعطى(x) والامر سيان بالنسبة للأنثى ، كان المولود انثى(xx) اي من (٤) كان (١ y )هو الذي يحدث التغيير من ضمن (٣ x) لذلك كانت النتيجة( ٩ ٨ ) او (9 8 ) ولهذين الرقمين دلالات ضمن الشريط أحدهما (9 y)او(8 x ) لاحظ كيف يكون الشكل مماثل حين تفك الالتفاف الحلقي في آلرقمين. لذلك حين تستخدم (٤) سيوف وتشكلها على هيئة كل سيفين متقابلين ستعطيك اما (xx ) او (٨٨ ) ولن تحصل على الرقم (٨٩) وهو تسلسل سورة ((الفجر)) في القرآن الكريم اي ستخيم عليك غاشية العذاب وتسلسلها (٨٨) لكي لا ترى نور فجر البيان ( ويأبى الله الا ان يتم نوره ولو كره الكافرون )... علمآ أن الفارق بين ايات الغاشية والفجر ( ٤) ايات %;&&
What I don’t understand is; Is the chromosome the entire X-shaped thing or the half of that X shaped thing, because in the middle of the video where you can see the 23 PAIRS of chromosomes, the single chromosomes are not X-shaped, but are just a strand.
This is an amazing video. Channel name is so apt and it is the most unambiguous video I have see so far on this topic. My son who is going to be a 7 year old next month loves your videos and I have use your videos to introduce him the concept of evolution and DNA. Thank you for doing this and hope you can do more of these videos.
Even at the start it doesn't get straight to the point and it goes to the whole video of the last one and thinks that we are geniuses and think we don't know what a string doesn't look like
You can see the X and Y chromosomes in the video. They are labeled 23. Unlike all the other pairs, these chromosomes, often called the sex chromosomes, are not a matching pair. The X is larger and more complete. The Y is smaller. Everyone gets one X from their mother. Females have two X chromosomes. Males have an X and a Y. So, all sperm carry either an X or a Y. Which sperm fertilizes the egg determines the sex. If the egg gets a second X, it'll be a girl. If the egg gets a Y, it'll be a boy.
That is the million dollar question. They do get tangled up. There are special slicing enzymes that, when two strands meet, cut one strand in half and glue it back together on the other side, effectively letting the strands "pass through each other".
No, the enzyme I'm talking about is called topoisomerase and is ubiquitous (present in all living organisms). CRISPR uses different protein (typically cas9) which's original purpose is to identify and destroy virus DNA by slicing it.
I've been studying _(or trying to)_ as a lay person everything cell related for at least 2-3 years now. No any other video has explained it better. EVER...
Chromosomes from Holy Quran Islamic Divine Scripture for all mankind: Dog -- facebook.com/quranicvisualmiracles/photos/a.1754138518178978/2150013558591470/?type=3&theater Donkey -- facebook.com/quranicvisualmiracles/photos/a.1754138518178978/2151625018430324/?type=3&theater Camel -- facebook.com/quranicvisualmiracles/photos/a.1754138518178978/2149997428593083/?type=3&theater Horse -- facebook.com/quranicvisualmiracles/photos/a.1754138518178978/2142575142668645/?type=3&theater Chimp -- facebook.com/quranicvisualmiracles/photos/a.1754138518178978/2003920739867420/?type=3&theater Bee -- facebook.com/quranicvisualmiracles/photos/a.1754138518178978/1984220291837465/?type=3&theater Pig -- facebook.com/quranicvisualmiracles/photos/a.1754138518178978/2142593996000093/?type=3&theater Here is a message : don't touch the pig. The count did not include the letters of the word pig.
Hello! Nice work. Here is a suggestion for future videos. If your goal is to "state things clearly", maybe avoid using the term "genetic code" when referring to a cell's genome. This is incorrect and potentially misleading. Hope this was helpful.
So many misconceptions and half-ideas in my brain are getting fixed right now!
😁 Precisely! No fuss, no intrusive music, no distractions! Kindest regards from 🇬🇧
You have the coolest username I have ever seen
Now I can understand Francis of the Filth lore.
BREXIT
No
@Snorn Cake yes “Sir Meow The Library Cat” is my new favourite name I’ve seen on this site
These videos are so well done. Keep making them!
Jonathan Davies kim
Jonathan Davies 😍😍😍
Hi,,
@@farukhossain6087 😊
Hi
Who had to watch this because of Biology class. In quarantine ? 😂
me
Joce Gudino me lmao
yes
Not me
me bro im going insane and biology so damn useless
As a biology student, you have no idea how these visuals help me understand. Thank you 🙏🏻
Not to brag guys, but people have been telling me I got extra chromosomes 😎
Down's syndrome ?
I'm surprised this joke didn't get more likes
@@x42brown33depends on which they have extra
Human have 46 chromosome potatoes have 48 LOL
I may have a gene 🧬 of special codes
This animated version is easier to understand than my teacher's drawing. Thank you
He he i get watchu mean
@@kanzu3074 yes lol
My teacher was like
"My drawing is bad,but hope you understand"
Me, *IN My BRAINE* : ummm...sir I already understood it anyway,you
Said this a billion times already,why are you drawing 😣😟"
Lol seriously exactly what I thought at that time
So sad that you guys point out your teacher's mistakes.
literally
There is something about microbiology teachers that none of them can clearly draw or explain to a class the differences and relationships between DNA, genes, allels, chromosomes,...etc. And the more a student asks for further clarification, the more messy and vague the teacher's explanation becomes. And even worse are psychology teachers who are generally unable to clearly define their terms and mark the differences between such concepts as feelings and emotions, consciousness and mind, thought and awareness, intelligence and intellect,...etc. And teachers seem more muddle headed and inarticulate nowadays than they were several decades ago. It is concerning.
I like how you make point of how chromosomes actually look the majority of the time.
Only you could describe how you manage to stay so true to your name
A chromosome is actually the currency used throughout the omniverse and can be produced be rackenfiles
Meme Extreme ayy a filthy frank fan
Big epic
xD
A rare example of science communication that sequentially unfolds only the relevant information in a simple, yet accurate, manner, targeted to the audience level. The visual hooks are always reinforcing the underlying concept (rather than distracting from it). The learning gradient and concept ladder are elegantly structured and paced to draw the audience comfortably through increasing levels of understanding. Great work.
Straight to the point, and you even review at the end. I appreciate your work!
These are my favorite videos to share with my biology students! Thank you!
Delaney Ralston 🤓😋
Hi!
All scientific evidence to date indicates that life can come only from previously existing life. To believe that even a “simple “ living cell arose by chance from nonliving chemicals requires a huge leap of faith. What do you think?
your a teacher and i have a question that has been bugging me and it isnt anywhere on the internet! are there 23 chromosomes in the human body all together or 23 in each cell.
@@iii_likefish hi fish, its been 8 months lol but im fairly sure there are 23 *pairs* of chromosomes in each cell :)
That liver just wet-slapping on the ground made be chuckle, beautifully animated video 😄
Ever time I hear that word it makes me thing of filtyfrank
Chin chin is collecting the chromosomes!
The dark lord
In the 40 years of my life, today I understood the difference between a gene, dna and a chromosome! Simply explained and good work!!!
funny how we were taught all of this at school but never in one single go, so most of the important links were just lost.
New Stated Clearly AND Kursgesagt video in the same day? Best day ever
Stated clearly indeed, John. Thank you . Sorry, it's still miraculous to me.
Finally something that really explain how it looks like.
Can I just say that you just saved my Bio grade?
Very informative for the already familiar to the basics of DNA 🧬 but a bit too fast in explanation for the people who have no prior knowledge of workings of the DNA and related topics.
thank you for giving me an A in my science :)
Who else is watching this in 2020? even though the video is out in 2017
Try 2023 lol
2024
I'm going to show this video to my biology class. You explain it very well. However, I wish you would not describe cell division as "reproducing". This is misleading and may confuse students who may already have the misconception that reproducing and cell division are the same thing. Other than that, this is a great video. Thanks for uploading.
Hi! I recommend the Jehovah’s Witnesses brochure: The Origin of Life- Five Questions Worth Asking.
Wow that was well .... Stated clearly. Excellent video it made the understanding so easy. Instantly subscribed.
Chromosomes are something you're born with and can't change.
But it is transphobic to say nowadays.
lol I’m watching this for a School Project
And by releasing this video stated clearly have completed its yearly quota of releasing videos on RUclips for this year come back next year for new video!
Let's all donate a little so they can make another before 2018! www.patreon.com/statedclearly
These animations make way more sense than how my teacher explained ut
So we are all mutants :D
Damn the way that liver fell down was so satisfying😍😂
Ah, this was the video that helped me last year understand chromosome structure better. I got a good mark on my bio exam with thanks to this video. Coming back one year later to revise xD
Thank you so much for your efforts. You really stated it clearly
I've lost too many of these since Papa Franku left.
This is so fascinating to me. I try to learn as much as I possibly can about chromosomes due to the fact that my daughter has 2 extremely rare chromosome mutations, she has 16p13.11 microduplication and 14q23.3q24.1 duplication too
@Hamish Channel No, down syndrome is a duplication of chromosome 21 aka Trisomy 21. My daughter has not got any duplications on chromosome 21, my auntie however does have down syndrome
Hmm I thought an organism's entire DNA was contained in a single continuous molecule/thread and during cell division, this single thread split down the middle to create two halves. That's what I thought after hearing statements like "If you unfolded your entire DNA, it'd stretch out to the moon" and "scientists have sequenced the human genome". I'm really struggling to reconcile these seemingly contradictory "one single chain" vs "many discrete chains" paradigms. Could someone help me out here?
Thank you so much. That was brilliant. This really help supplement my learning.
*yeets human liver on floor*
I finally understand this concept, thank you, your videos are precise and straight to the point.
Hi! I recommend the Jehovah’s Witnesses brochure: The Origin of Life- Five Questions Worth Asking.
Should have mentioned the journey to 23 ... i.e evolution of Chromosome.
This channel is a gem!
God is great. The creator of universe and life. Awesome!
This is so easy to follow plus the facts you learn so much and he makes it fun 😃
2:21 I’m new to this concept since I’m in 7th, but, If chromosomes are noodle like then how do we seperate them into 23 pairs?
Great vid! It was very descriptive and straight to the point!
You’ve earned yourself a sub!
Oomgg finally man a video! I started worrying about you ^^ keep up the good work
That is an awesome vedieo!!
.
Chin chin is collecting the chromosomes
It's like you've just summarized my entire grade 9 biology! And it's stated very clearly!
Can't mutations also happen during your entire lifetime?
I guess they mostly only matter to evolution if they happen early enough in development to make it into your gonad cells (so you can then pass it on to your offspring). But i guess it's still possible for a mutation to occur to JUST a relevant gonad cell, which then produces/becomes a mutated sperm or egg cell. This could happen any time in your life, even during adulthood, but it probably won't effect your life coz it's just one cell (unless it grows into a cancer).
Yes, they happen every day but don't ever make it to dominate your body unless they happen super early. Any mutation, early or late, that happens in the germ line, can make it into sperm and thus, effect evolution.
i thoht mutations happened during the (building new life) stage. mutations are passed along to offspring??
A big "thank you" to all the people who were involved in making this video and the rest. You guys and gals have a great channel. =) Much love.
You are amazing 😊😊😊
2:50 well actually the mother cells are the ones that decide how those cells will be produced for each part of the body.. sometimes you get mutations which lead to diseases as the mother cell no longer has the proper "source code" to compile the cell; Hence, stem cell therapy! Awesome video, thanks!
could you elaborate I don't understand
*Can somebody please explain me:-*
That Gene is a piece of dna that codes for protein and determines a particular phenotype but how can *each cell have same kind of genes which all code for height, complexion , eye colour etc ...* OR does each cell have 23 pairs of chromosomes that no matter what the cell is...
**IT MAY A DUMB DOUBT BUT PLEASE CLEAR IT CAUSE IAM REALLY STUCK AT THIS**
Apart from gametes (ie sperm and egg cells), every cell has the 23 pairs of chromosomes
I just discovered your channel and is absolutely wonderful!! Each topic is explained beautifully.
Brilliant mate, love your videos.
A Student's love for U from India ...!! Understandable .😊
Your lessons are awesome, I wish you made them more often...
Hooked on learning biologicalcompass.com
I am just finishing up Siddhartha Mukherjee's excellent book The Gene: An Intimate History. The only thing that could have made that book better is the kind of visual models you provide here. Very, very well done.
Thanks for doing this, understanding of biology is crucial for so many other fields of science, from medicine, population dynamics all the way to ecology (and more of course).
how are genes "off"? you say eye ball genes are on but the rest are off. can ou explain what turns genes on and off?
Thank you for producing this wonderfully helpful video! I am studying for my general curriculum MTEL and your explanation of chromosomes has saved my sanity.
وعد الآخرة
النسبة الثابتة
** وليقول الذين في قلوبهم مرض والكافرون ماذا اراد الله بهذا مثلا كذلك يضل الله من يشاء ويهدي من يشاء وما يعلم جنود ربك الا هو وما هي إلا ذكرى للبشر **(٣١) المدثر
٣،١٤٢٨٥٧١٤٢٩
النسبة (١) إلى(٣) في تحديد السنة الكبيسه حيث كل (٤) سنوات تكون فيها سنة واحدة ضمن التسلسل الفردي عدد ايام شهر شباط فيها مكون من (٢٩) يوم ،اما السنوات الثلاثه فيكون فيها شهر شباط مكون من (٢٨) يوم
وبنفس النسبة لزوج الكروموسومات الانثويه الجنسية( xx) وزوج الكروموسومات الجنسية في الذكر (xy) حيث أن هذه الكروموسومات الاربعه المشتركه في عملية احتمالية التكاثر وتكوين الامشاج التي تتحد لتكوين شريط كروموسومي جديد للمولود فإذا كان(y ) من الذكر و(x) من الأنثى كان المولود ذكر (xy) اما اذا كلاهما اعطى(x) والامر سيان بالنسبة للأنثى ، كان المولود انثى(xx) اي من (٤) كان (١ y )هو الذي يحدث التغيير من ضمن (٣ x) لذلك كانت النتيجة( ٩ ٨ ) او (9 8 )
ولهذين الرقمين دلالات ضمن الشريط أحدهما
(9 y)او(8 x )
لاحظ كيف يكون الشكل مماثل حين تفك الالتفاف الحلقي في آلرقمين.
لذلك حين تستخدم (٤) سيوف وتشكلها على هيئة
كل سيفين متقابلين ستعطيك اما (xx ) او (٨٨ ) ولن تحصل على الرقم (٨٩) وهو تسلسل سورة ((الفجر)) في القرآن الكريم اي ستخيم عليك غاشية العذاب وتسلسلها (٨٨) لكي لا ترى نور فجر البيان ( ويأبى الله الا ان يتم نوره ولو كره الكافرون )... علمآ أن الفارق بين ايات الغاشية والفجر ( ٤) ايات %;&&
I LOVE YOU JON sorry but this helped so much. SUBBED
You made my basic crystal clear.
So nice!
What I don’t understand is; Is the chromosome the entire X-shaped thing or the half of that X shaped thing, because in the middle of the video where you can see the 23 PAIRS of chromosomes, the single chromosomes are not X-shaped, but are just a strand.
So actually Chromosomes number depends upon number of centromere
It could be single or double stranded
Thank you! That's very informative. I've always had a rough time visualizing how DNA, Chromosomes and Genes are related
Hi! I recommend the Jehovah’s Witnesses brochure: The Origin of Life- Five Questions Worth Asking.
Why hasn't anyone else figured out how to make these things as simple and non confusing as this before?? thank you!!
This is an amazing video. Channel name is so apt and it is the most unambiguous video I have see so far on this topic. My son who is going to be a 7 year old next month loves your videos and I have use your videos to introduce him the concept of evolution and DNA. Thank you for doing this and hope you can do more of these videos.
Thanks! So glad to hear this... or read this!
Is he 13 now?
Even at the start it doesn't get straight to the point and it goes to the whole video of the last one and thinks that we are geniuses and think we don't know what a string doesn't look like
Thank you so much for having these. I’m taking Biological Psychology this semester and these helped me get around some concepts.
This vedio is really soo good!! Very Helpful.... Thank you so much!
These clearly explained science videos are priceless, thank you for producing them.
Look brother Jon Perry, I am just stunned & in my years of viewing science animations this one was the best!!
Who is here from the sidemen vid? 😂😂
that was an amazing video! I showed my kids, but learned so much myself! Thanks!
Ok, so what's the difference between the X Chromosome and the Y Chromosome?
the dna included of c ourse
the x chromosome carries more information, the y only those bits that are different
The X comes from your mom, Y from your dad.
You can see the X and Y chromosomes in the video. They are labeled 23. Unlike all the other pairs, these chromosomes, often called the sex chromosomes, are not a matching pair. The X is larger and more complete. The Y is smaller. Everyone gets one X from their mother. Females have two X chromosomes. Males have an X and a Y. So, all sperm carry either an X or a Y. Which sperm fertilizes the egg determines the sex. If the egg gets a second X, it'll be a girl. If the egg gets a Y, it'll be a boy.
Excellent , thanks for that!
I'm in 12 standard from INDIA 🇮🇳 & I found this video which really boosted my knowledge ☺
Waited long. Love this channel
Damn I wish you made more educational videos! These are by far the BEST videos that I learned from. I look forward to more in the future. 👍
Awesome explanation
Muito bom, parabéns pelo vídeo.
My parents are so proud of me because I’m gifted with having more chromosomes than the average population
IT REALLY STATED CLEARLY
So, how do they avoid becoming the jumbled mess my box of Christmas lights are when it's time to roll up and copy?
Michael Perry - the details aren't fully understood but protein scafdolding prevents tangles.
That is the million dollar question. They do get tangled up. There are special slicing enzymes that, when two strands meet, cut one strand in half and glue it back together on the other side, effectively letting the strands "pass through each other".
KohuGaly CRISPR?
No, the enzyme I'm talking about is called topoisomerase and is ubiquitous (present in all living organisms).
CRISPR uses different protein (typically cas9) which's original purpose is to identify and destroy virus DNA by slicing it.
this is good for students
Not helpful for me at all 😁kind regards from 🇬🇧
2:40 It's a boy!
You beat me to the punch.
Which
Thats what i was about to comment!
@@neptunehiro7091 you can see in chromosome 23 there is one long and one short chromosome, i.e X and Y, i.e a male.
Thanks buddy
I fucking love this guy. He makes my life easier
Nicely visualized! Have been struggling with the concept without the image 😂😊👍🏼
Well done! Thank for this concise and easy to understand video
Best video on chromosome that i ever seen in the past
I've been studying _(or trying to)_ as a lay person everything cell related for at least 2-3 years now. No any other video has explained it better. EVER...
I am not even a biology student.... Yet i can't stop myself from watching it. Amazing 👍👍
Chromosomes from Holy Quran Islamic Divine Scripture for all mankind:
Dog -- facebook.com/quranicvisualmiracles/photos/a.1754138518178978/2150013558591470/?type=3&theater
Donkey -- facebook.com/quranicvisualmiracles/photos/a.1754138518178978/2151625018430324/?type=3&theater
Camel -- facebook.com/quranicvisualmiracles/photos/a.1754138518178978/2149997428593083/?type=3&theater
Horse -- facebook.com/quranicvisualmiracles/photos/a.1754138518178978/2142575142668645/?type=3&theater
Chimp -- facebook.com/quranicvisualmiracles/photos/a.1754138518178978/2003920739867420/?type=3&theater
Bee -- facebook.com/quranicvisualmiracles/photos/a.1754138518178978/1984220291837465/?type=3&theater
Pig -- facebook.com/quranicvisualmiracles/photos/a.1754138518178978/2142593996000093/?type=3&theater
Here is a message : don't touch the pig. The count did not include the letters of the word pig.
Hello! Nice work. Here is a suggestion for future videos. If your goal is to "state things clearly", maybe avoid using the term "genetic code" when referring to a cell's genome. This is incorrect and potentially misleading. Hope this was helpful.
You guys need to make way more videos! One per month would be good.
these videos are awesome should be very popular Great Job Stated Clearly!!!!!
As a psychology student who needs to study neuroscience but sucks with life sciences. Videos like this are life savers. Thanks ! 😌
great video, a savior for students who can't follow the confusing textbooks and lectures
Excellent!Reading “A little history of science” P160 :“when a cell was dividing,the chromosomes could actually be seen to swell.” and comes here
I love this channel so much! I've learnt more from you than from school. Thanks for putting the time and effort! :D