Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Cat in the Hat (also known as Dr. Seuss' The Cat in the Hat) is a 2003 2.5D platform game for PlayStation 2, Xbox, Microsoft Windows and Game Boy Advance. The PlayStation 2 and Xbox versions were developed by Magenta Software. The Windows and Game Boy Advance versions were developed by Digital Eclipse.
Earwig with large cerci (top). Cerci (sg.: cercus) are paired appendages usually on the rear-most segments of many arthropods, including insects and symphylans.Many forms of cerci serve as sensory organs, but some serve as pinching weapons or as organs of copulation. [1]
Compound eye of a house centipede Compound eye of a dragonfly. A compound eye is a visual organ found in arthropods such as insects and crustaceans.It may consist of thousands of ommatidia, [1] which are tiny independent photoreception units that consist of a cornea, lens, and photoreceptor cells which distinguish brightness and color.
The Cat in the Hat (play) The Cat in the Hat (video game) The Cat in the Hat (1997 video game) The Cat in the Hat (TV special) The Cat in the Hat Comes Back; List of The Cat in the Hat Knows a Lot About That! episodes; The Cat in the Hat Knows a Lot About That! The Cat in the Hat (film) The Cat's Quizzer
The Cat in the Hat Knows a Lot About That! is an animated musical educational children's television series feature starring Martin Short as The Cat in the Hat. The series premiered on Treehouse TV in Canada on August 7, 2010, also airing on YTV and Nickelodeon Canada on weekday mornings from 2012 to 2013, [1] and on PBS Kids and PBS Kids Preschool Block in the US on September 6, 2010.
The Cat in the Hat Knows a Lot About That! is an animated musical educational children's television series feature starring Martin Short as The Cat in the Hat. The series premiered on Treehouse TV in Canada on August 7, 2010, also airing on YTV and Nickelodeon Canada on weekday mornings from 2012 to 2013, [2] and on PBS Kids and PBS Kids Preschool Block in the US on September 6, 2010; it also ...
There is a chordotonal organ located at the base of the wings in many insect orders, and, in Dipterans, there are also two chordotonal organs found at the base of the haltere. Their function is currently not well understood. In lacewings, a tympanal organ is located in the radius vein of the forewing and is thought to monitor ultrasound. [2]
The visual systems of Chelicerata (the sister group to the remaining Arthropoda) are less well understood. It has been shown that homologs of many eye patterning genes are variably expressed in the eyes of different spider species, but the functional significance of these changes in expression is not well understood, due to lack of functional data.