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Bacteria
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Bacteria are single-celled microorganisms found in virtually every environment on Earth, and their relationship to human health makes them a central subject across biology, microbiology, public health, and environmental science courses. Students write about bacteria because the topic bridges fundamental life science — how these organisms are classified, structured, and identified — with urgent clinical and social questions about infection, disease transmission, and treatment. The subject demands both laboratory-level precision and broader analytical thinking about how bacterial diseases develop, spread through populations, and affect patients at the individual and community level.

The papers archived here reflect a wide range of approaches. Many focus on specific diseases or pathogens, including tuberculosis, syphilis, gum disease, and Campylobacter jejuni, examining symptoms, transmission, and treatment options. Others take a clinical or pharmacological angle, analyzing antibiotics such as penicillin and cephalosporin and the growing problem of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Lab-based work appears frequently as well, including gram staining procedures and morphological identification reports rooted in standard microbiology methods. A smaller number of papers take a broader perspective, addressing biological warfare and how infection could spread through a population, or situating bacteria within environmental science contexts.

A strong essay on bacteria begins with a tightly scoped thesis — focusing on a specific pathogen, treatment challenge, or mechanism rather than bacteria as a whole. Evidence drawn from clinical data, laboratory findings, or documented case studies carries the most weight in health-oriented writing. A common pitfall is treating symptoms and transmission descriptively without connecting them to a clear argument about diagnosis, treatment effectiveness, or public health implications.

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Paper Doctorate
Scientific Inquiry Into Extraterrestrial Life
In the early days of Ufology, researchers appeared too eager to verify sightings, which they then interpreted as evidence of 'nuts and bolts' spacecraft piloted by intelligent EBEs. Like numerous deities and other extraterrestrial visitors, EBEs are generally held to be concerned about human conduct. This concern was widely reported in the spate of UFO sightings after the Second World War and the beginnings of the nuclear age. Sensationalist reports merging with Hollywood fantasy led to a distancing of orthodox science from Ufology. Explanations offered by Ufologists frequently ignored Occam's razor, which is a rule against multiplying entities or - in general terms - a rule which says don't involve extraordinary hypotheses until the ordinary ones have been eliminated. The apparent resistance to falsification also contributed to Ufology's lack of credibility. However, modern Ufologists, such as Jenny Randles and Paul Fuller of the British Unidentified Flying Object Research Association (BUFORA), are strict adherents to Popperian-inspired scientific methodology, enthusiastically seeking to falsify EBE explanations and providing explanations which are acceptable to orthodox scientific opinion. In this respect the modern Ufologist is a debunker rather than a myth-spinning believer. Explanations in terms of atmospheric phenomena, hallucinations or hoaxes are generally expected from BUFORA publications. Over the years the BUFORA standpoint has been vindicated. So much 'confirmatory' evidence has been demonstrably unreliable. Photographs, which were once considered as hard evidence, are now held to have zero credibility because of the likelihood of fakes. With the advent of sophisticated image-manipulation computers whose work is undetectable, photographs unsupported by other reliable confirmatory evidence are unacceptable. Eye witness reports are also problematic as they are frequently influenced by psychological and cultural factors.
Essay Doctorate
Gram Stain Bacteria Identification Following Standard Procedure
Clostridium tetani is an anaerobic pathogenic bacterium that is primarily found in soil and animal intestinal tracts. As characteristic of all bacteria, C. tetani bacteria are single-celled and do not contain any membrane-bound organelles, such as a nucleus. This bacterium is Gram-positive, meaning it lacks an outer lipopolysaccharide membrane and possesses only a thick peptidoglycan cellular wall. However, established vegetative bacterium occasionally stain Gram-negative, indicating a development of a thin
Paper Undergraduate
Security Risk Assessment: Organizational and Technical Risks
Organizational risks are complex and as a result are difficult to foresee and eliminate than are technical risks. Organizational risks include a wide-ranging set of different kinds of risks, from legal liability to…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Forensics in Very General Terms,
In very general terms, forensics can be defined as the application of science to law. (a Career in Forensic Science: What is Forensic Science?) Forensics is usually referred to in the context of criminal cases and…
Paper Undergraduate
Marketing plan for toothpaste product launch
The essence of any effective marketing plan is to seek out opportunities for a unique, defensible, differentiated market position (Bronnenberg, 2008). Toothpaste that through its unique chemical properties can also…
Paper Undergraduate
Extremophiles and their biological adaptations
It is easy to assume that all life on earth require a delicate and forgiving environmental balance. Oxygen, water, and moderate temperatures are key to the survival of most organisms.
Paper Undergraduate
Cree\'s Opposition to the James
Canada is one of the leading producers and users of hydroelectric power, and, its electricity production has been considered "green" or better for the environment because of that usage.
Research Paper Doctorate
Lung Disease Affecting Many Americans.
¶ … lung disease affecting many Americans. Specifically it will discuss emphysema, including what it is, what causes it, what are some preventions, clinical features, diagnosis, and treatments.
Paper Undergraduate
Endospores: \"Evolution Has Gifted Some
"Evolution has gifted some bacterial species the ability to die today but live again someday. This ability is what we term reincarnation in human society" (Sace and Nicole, par 1). Bacterial species are also reincarnated.
Paper Doctorate
People From History That Impacted the World
¶ … People From History That Impacted the World in a Positive Way