Biology, asked by ahuja81, 1 year ago

how fusion is different in chemistry and in biology​

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Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

Chemical warfare refers to the use of just that, chemicals. Caustic agents like mustard gas or agent orange that are used to incapacitate personnel by poisoning, burning, or asphyxiation.

Biological warfare refers to the use of germ related weapons. Dropping rats with the bubonic plague into military or civilian targets (actually happened, japanese tested during WWII) launching decomposing corpses into enemy lines or fortifications, or misting people with a concentrated solution of smallpox.

The main difference is biological uses pathogens or disease, while chemical uses any of the variety of ways to inflict death by chemical exposure.

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