60 apples
60
The fraction is(thickness of the thinnest layer)/(thickness of the thickest layer) After you write that fraction, you can simplify it if you feel like it.
Plywood is manufactured from thin sheets of wood. Where as PLY means layer of Material. Hence LAYER(s) OF WOOD = PLYWOOD
In square close-packed layer, a molecule is in contact with four of its neighbours. Therefore, the two-dimensional coordination number of a molecule in square close-packed layer is 4.
You could start with 100% energy for the first layer, 10% for the second layer, 1% for the third and 0.1% for the fourth layer. If the biome is very poor in producers, you could start with 50%, 5%, 0.5% there would be only 0.05% for a fourth layer and it would not support anything.
No, Apple Computers do not have a layer of wax on them. Apples, the fruit, however, do.
Always the bottom layer will be of chloroform and upper layer of water due to difference in the density.
An apple is an example of a pome. It is a type of fruit that has a core containing seeds surrounded by a fleshy layer.
60
The easiest way to cook frozen apples is with recipes that require 'mushy' apples, as opposed to whole chunks (since apples go really mushy after they've been defrosted or cooked from frozen). Apple pies or crumbles work well with soft apples. You could also use the apples to make chutney quite easily, or jam (if you also use blackberries or some other additional fruit). You can use chunky apple puree as a layer in between flapjacks (put half the flapjack mix in a tin, flatten down, add a layer of apple puree, then the rest of the flapjack mix).
An explanation can be the deleting of the protective layer of the fruit.
The forest canopy, at the top of the trees, where the fruit is.
It's wax. (meant to preserve the fruit, but completley edible by people)
skin,peel
ispaghol/husk
cuticle
The banyan tree is not flowerless.The flowers lie in the fruit and are covered by a thick layer of fruit flesh.When cutting the fruit, tiny pink parts can be seen.These are the flowers.