The cage was lowered by winch and wire rope to a depth of 5m, just deep enough to escape the surface surge and swell. |
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I neither agreed with nor approved her methods or her language, but there was never any doubt about her passion and the depth of her conviction. |
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A 10-mm cannulated reamer was drilled from distal to proximal over each guidewire through the cortex to a depth of 10 mm. |
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Ditches are often absent, or only dug on one side, while metalling varies in width, depth and design. |
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The cabinet has agreed to publish agendas before each meeting, publicly going into depth on the issues which will be discussed. |
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It was at that time that another depth charge exploded close to the aft starboard fin. |
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The principal commodities were depth defensemen, who rotated among teams in a dizzy kaleidoscope, and some intriguing goalie switches. |
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Could the magmatic conditions at depth allow argon to be occluded within the minerals at the time of their formation? |
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Loosen any roots that are encircling the root ball, replant at same depth as originally planted. |
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Dryland corn is rooting at the three foot depth and, even with high temperatures and lack of precipitation, it is looking good. |
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Mixing colours and materials and experimenting with painting techniques like sponging can add new depth to your room's decor. |
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Results, as in all cases of liposuction then, were limited by the patient's skin quality and the depth of suction. |
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After finishing the surface, the grain texture of amboyna wood has a depth and richness unmatched in other textured woods. |
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Recent signings will undoubtedly provide extra strength and depth but Warne will always remain the key man. |
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The space between this depth and the base of the model is filled with asthenospheric material with a constant density. |
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Cedary oak and lees yeastiness give excellent depth and graciously offsets the rich underlying fruit. |
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The presence of both Jomon and Yayoi cultures contributed depth and complexity to the Ise complex. |
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Nelson Mandela, for example, describes in his autobiography the depth of presence of Robben Island in the Xhosa language. |
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For best results apply mulch to a depth of least 15 cm thick, avoiding the area immediately around plant stems and tree trunks. |
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As you have to get close, you have to manage with a very limited depth of field. |
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The chapters do vary significantly, however, in the depth of analysis and the strength of linkage to the central premises of the research. |
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Only the most inept of dramatists could deliver a romance so completely lacking in depth and subtlety. |
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Critics have poked holes in her arguments, alleging that her renowned depth of knowledge is shockingly shallow. |
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I like to be reminded of the spring miracle, especially in the depth of winter, when the vibrantly alive trees look so dead. |
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The regional variation of ocean depth acts as a lens to refract the waves, just as a lens refracts light. |
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It's an A-level commentary, providing a lot of depth and insight for the viewer. |
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A 20-minute wrestle ensued and Tut emerged victorious, bringing the crocodile up from the depth of the water. |
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A Gore-Tex liner and careful gusset design make them waterproof to a depth of about 8 inches. |
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Cosmology and astrophysics are branches of physics in which one needs an unusual combination of breadth and depth to excel. |
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There is no time for balance, reflection, consideration of alternative viewpoints, depth of coverage, etc, etc. |
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The bidders are charged an application fee of 100,000 kronor and then winners are chosen on merit as opposed to depth of pocket. |
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There is a depth to the European Championship that cannot even be found at a World Cup. |
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Aghion, moreover, covers all the relevant topics in sufficient depth to escape any suspicion of reductiveness, at least as far as I am concerned. |
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The staff, which is excited about Baker's ability, wanted to redshirt him because of depth at the position. |
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The sense of sunny awe and wonderment is not as evident, but the lyrics have more depth this time around. |
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A normal cabinet does not have the necessary depth to store large-sized prints. |
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Its lack of depth makes it more difficult each year to handle the newer, larger and deeper vessels plying the southern African route. |
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Because DeepView displays only in wireframe, without depth cueing, stereo viewing will help you to carry out mouse functions precisely. |
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It has the structure in some ways of an airport paperback but has the style and depth of a literary novel. |
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What is your sense of the depth of the problem, if you will, and what can be done? |
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Few scientists can match the range, depth and scope of his biodiversity knowledge. |
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Ricketts couldn't have looked more out of his depth had he taken to the field in flippers and a wetsuit. |
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I was a bit less enthusiastic, not being the type to jump in with both feet before testing the depth of the water. |
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These are well-worn themes to be sure, but few have the depth of knowledge or the keen language skills of these men. |
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His resonant use of the bass string to render the notes of a raga in the lower octave has lent gravity and depth to his recitals. |
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For more than a hundred years, we have added dimension and depth to the lives of campers and staff. |
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While large numbers of Americans professed religious belief, the depth of their conviction appeared weak. |
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The skeletal remains were in poor condition, probably as the result of soil acidity and the shallow depth of many of the burials. |
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When standing water was no longer observable at a site, a monitoring well was used to determine the depth of the water table. |
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Controlled drainage uses valves to open and close drainage pipes and structures to control the depth of the water table. |
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The depth at the shallow end could have been kept at a level to play water polo, certainly not in excess of four feet. |
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There is another that discusses in depth the process of taking the music from the acetates or tapes and transferring them to disc. |
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To add some depth to my eyes, I applied the eyeliner on my upper and lower waterlines. |
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The switch activates the bilge pump when the rising water level reaches a depth of 2 inches. |
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I've never liked the lake with its menacing suggestion of depth and its ability to attract noisy watercraft. |
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More recently, we've seen six-foot koalas accosting political leaders and asking in depth questions on real issues. |
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Surprise surprise a global warmist was quoted as saying that a volcano at that depth under the ice sheet would have no effect! |
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Avoid high demands for air during the dive by limiting your depth and work-rate. |
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There was little in Georgian or Abkhaz national mythology to explain the depth of hatred that arose during the conflict there. |
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The pregnancy storyline was a bit much and definitely unneeded although it added depth to Dan's family life. |
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It is a shallow subsidence flash, no more than a metre or two in depth at most. |
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Researchers use the shadow lengths to calculate the depth of the craters, and the height of the crater rims. |
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Although this book has a certain gossipy charm, it lacks intellectual depth or rigour. |
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A sterile uterine sound or an endometrial aspirator should be used to determine the depth of the uterine cavity. |
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To the right of the entrance hall is a dual aspect drawing room extending the depth of the house and featuring an Adams-style marble fireplace. |
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Eight inflatable plastic wading pools were placed in a field, filled to a depth of 25 cm with pond water, and left uncovered. |
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The pictures show a female gorilla grabbing a branch to gauge the depth of a pool of water before wading across it. |
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No license is needed for an EPIRB, radar, Loran, GPS, depth finder or CB radio. |
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Although it's the depth of winter, the loquat trees are still verdant and the leaves of the osmanthus trees are fresh and green. |
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Calling Potter a writer undermines a great deal of the depth and dynamics he brought to the lexicon of language. |
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Keep both ankles loose and relaxed inside your boots so you can easily roll them to the sides and increase the depth of your edge set. |
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Tom Wilkinson, sporting a letter-perfect American accent, brings depth and humanity to the part of Father Moore. |
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In general, lime does not move downward further than plow depth in an organic soil. |
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These decades of collecting and collating myths, legends and historical snippets are clearly reflected in breadth and depth of the book. |
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If 48 tracks seems excessive, this retails at standard single-CD price and reveals unexpected depth to an often overlooked artist. |
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Kafue lechwe are happiest standing in up to 50 cm depth of water, only coming out to rest or calve. |
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There are also animatics, galleries, storyboard comparisons and a few deleted scenes, but nothing particularly in depth or exciting. |
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Debbie maintained that depth of emotion in her performance throughout the shoot. |
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Deep soundings above 6 fathoms were impracticable so the practice then was to sound the depth using a line and lead. |
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The performances also have the depth of emotion that sweeps you into the lives of the characters without doubts or reservations. |
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Take pencil-thick cuttings, about nine inches long, and plunge them outside to a depth of six inches in a trench lined with sharp sand. |
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She was exceedingly beautiful, fully grown yet young still, and in her eyes was a depth and maturity that never ceased to captivate the looker. |
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But as any who read or reread those essays will know, a huge depth of learning, often from the archives, underpinned the edifice of argument. |
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Cut the potatoes in half longways, and score the flesh to a depth of about half an inch. |
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His photos artfully communicate the perception of depth we experience in walking around an actual sculpture. |
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Currently, the brigade commander lacks sufficient depth in his maneuver array. |
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This in itself suggests the depth of localism and regionalism and the seriousness of giving them due weight in symbolizing the nation as a whole. |
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The danger is that we should confuse the reputability of beliefs, and the reputability of those who professed them, with depth or shallowness. |
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Place the seeds on this and cover with soil to the depth of the seed, then water with a watering can rose. |
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Below the depth of oxygen penetration life is restricted to anaerobic bacteria. |
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It wasn't long ago that the Giants had the best Major League ready pitching prospect depth in the minors. |
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Place good soil under root ball so that the plant will be the same depth it grew as before. |
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There aren't many teams with more pitching depth in the minors, but this bullpen is terrible. |
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Secondly, we are all aware that we should try kit out in shallow water before gradually building up our depth and experience and undertaking more adventurous dives. |
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Through his experience with The grandmaster, Leung discovered the depth of the revered practice. |
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The depth and adultness of Connie, however, may well be more due to the stunning performance of Diane Lane than to the script or to Lyne's direction. |
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He speaks as both the film's director and star, and rightly heaps praise on his cast, both leads and supporting actors, whose excellent work adds much depth to the film. |
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Furthermore, in choosing the forward edge, it is important to take into account terrain relief, the type of soil, and the depth of the snow cover. |
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The earliest vineyards were selected to provide a sunny aspect, commonly on a hillside slope, a sufficient depth of soil, and access to water for the roots. |
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Moments later, a high-pressure air line connecting to main ballast tanks allowing the submarine to control its depth bursts its seal in the seventh compartment. |
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The depth and rate of breathing are controlled by special centres in the brain, which influence the nerves that cause contraction and relaxation of the muscles of respiration. |
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Gearing up for the season ending play-offs, the trip gave enough reassurance of the strength in depth at the Club with both newcomers acquitting themselves with distinction. |
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Zoe Saldana has also recently praised sci-fi movies for the depth and breadth of women in its ensembles. |
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Men like watches with features that they can boast about such as the degree of accuracy, depth of water resistance, thinness and lightness of the watch. |
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The depth of the background investigations depends on the level of clearance. |
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But some presidents grow stronger rhetorically in the job as the gravitas of the office lends depth to their words. |
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It is the intention of this book to provide an overview of the behaviour of alicyclic compounds in the depth required for an undergraduate chemistry course. |
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The ability to provide instant access to detailed background analysis and comment pieces brought more depth of coverage than other media could provide. |
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So for me, it was just about showing the level of depth and capacity for that kind of violence. |
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This act of solidarity with the lowest of the low in a place of unspeakable violence illustrates the unbounded depth and breadth of God's compassionate presence. |
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This paradoxical blend of the practical and the unworldly lends depth and texture to his best work, but it was a volatile mix and didn't always work. |
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Once the depth of the queue is reached, the storage of each new address in the queue causes a previously stored address to be output from the queue. |
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George was in his element at those times, and the depth of his knowledge amazed me. |
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Sediment had covered them to such a depth that retrieval was impossible. |
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His voice sounded dull and dry to him, without depth or meaning anymore. |
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Parallel lines that appear to converge this way create what's known as one-point or linear perspective, potent for showing distance and depth in a photograph. |
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Soldiers of Liberty combines the depth of a squad based game with the intensity of an action-packed war game that unfolds in the streets, subways, and buildings of the city. |
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The near-constant depth of the abyssal sea floor indicates that the lithosphere thickens to roughly 100 km in 70 million years, but then ceases to grow. |
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Richard Robidoux, the project manager for E. D. Swett, Inc., said a hundred piles were driven to a depth of between 120 and 160 feet for the bridge abutments. |
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An extension of an old lava flow that submerged the surrounding beach, the wall begins at 5ft, three yards from the island's shore, and drops to a maximum depth of 65 ft. |
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But it has a depth and ambitiousness that are worthy of praise. |
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My trip takes the reverse path, and I begin by assessing the depth of my Shakespeare knowledge in his birthplace. |
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These results indicate that ultrasound muscle width and depth may be alternative predictors of carcass muscle area and may be useful in selection of potential replacements. |
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It may be argued that the long duration of implantation of depth electrodes in the limbic system could decrease the local threshold for induction of afterdischarges. |
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The traditional principles of perspective usually go by the board, though many naive artists are capable of rendering distance and depth by their own means. |
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But their selectivity in applying scripture shows the depth of their hypocrisy. |
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MacCulloch wrote of this in depth in a book published in 1911 entitled Religion of the Ancient Celts. |
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Heavy snowfall can occur in winter and early spring on high ground, and occasionally settles to great depth away from the hills. |
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The amount of light penetrating the seawater also varies with depth and turbidity. |
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The northeast portion has a depth of between 90m and 100m, increasing towards Saint George's Channel. |
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Frieze Magazine noted his lack of shoelaces and inferred a multitude of depth and commentary on the prison system. |
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However, there remain serious concerns about the depth of the sport in Britain, with the number of club athletes reportedly in decline. |
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The Black Country Society defines the Black Country's borders as the area on the thirty foot coal seam, regardless the depth of the seam. |
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The new House of Commons had more Conservative than Whig members, but the depth of the Tory schism enabled Russell to continue to govern. |
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Since early ASDIC equipment was poor at determining depth, it was usual to vary the depth settings on part of the pattern. |
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The explosion of a depth charge also disturbed the water, so ASDIC contact was very difficult to regain if the first attack had failed. |
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The classification of lakes by thermal stratification presupposes lakes with sufficient depth to form a hypolimnion. |
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The depth to which light can reach in lakes depends on turbidity, determined by the density and size of suspended particles. |
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The depth at which the disk is no longer visible is the Secchi depth, a measure of transparency. |
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The underlying geology of most of Caithness is old red sandstone to an estimated depth of over 4,000 metres. |
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Degas also continues the use of lines to create depth and separate space within the scene. |
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Peridotite at depth in the Earth's mantle may be hotter than its solidus temperature at some shallower level. |
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One copper mine at Great Orme in North Wales, extended to a depth of 70 meters. |
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Some cormorant species have been found, using depth gauges, to dive to depths of as much as 45 metres. |
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Additionally, civilian vessels produce sonar waves in order to measure the depth of the body of water in which they are. |
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By adding richness and depth to the manuscript, the use of gold in illuminations created pieces of art that are still valued today. |
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This change in density incompletely compensates for hull compression, so buoyancy decreases as depth increases. |
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Keeping a constant depth requires continual operation of either the depth control tanks or control surfaces. |
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When a submarine performs an emergency surfacing, all depth and trim methods are used simultaneously, together with propelling the boat upwards. |
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Hull mounted sonar is employed in addition to the towed array, as the towed array can't work in shallow depth and during maneuvering. |
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Zones which vary according to their depth include the epipelagic, mesopelagic, bathypelagic, abyssopelagic, and hadopelagic zones. |
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A kite was a drag, towed under water at any depth up to about 40 fathoms, which upon striking bottom, was upset and rose to the surface. |
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Contours are one of several common methods used to denote elevation or altitude and depth on maps. |
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Another concept that affects safe navigation is the sparsity of detailed depth data from high resolution sonar systems. |
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In more remote areas, the only available depth information has been collected with lead lines. |
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Originally, bathymetry involved the measurement of ocean depth through depth sounding. |
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This technique measures the depth only a singular point at a time, and is therefore inefficient. |
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The pelagic zone includes all open ocean regions, and can be divided into further regions categorized by depth and light abundance. |
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Temperature and salinity are relatively constant with depth in this zone due to currents and wave action. |
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The pycnocline refers to a zone wherein density substantially increases with depth due primarily to decreases in temperature. |
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In littoral zones, breaking wave is so intense and the depth measurement so low, that maritime currents reach often 1 to 2 knots. |
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Wavelength determines the size of the orbits of water molecules within a wave, but water depth determines the shape of the orbits. |
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The period of a wave remains unchanged regardless of the depth of water through which it is moving. |
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As the depth below the free surface increases, the radius of the circular motion decreases. |
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Maerl beds occur in the photic zone, and can be found to around 30 m depth in the British Isles and up to 120 m deep in the Mediterranean. |
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Generally, these include life forms that tolerate cool temperatures and low oxygen levels, but this depends on the depth of the water. |
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It can be difficult to maintain tidal stream generators due to their size and depth in the water. |
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We measured the height, breadth, and depth of each piece of furniture. |
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I began working at the factory during the depth of the Depression. |
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Common burn indicators include alligatoring, crazing, the depth of char, lines of demarcation, sagged furniture springs and spalling. |
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In this film, the almost antidramatic construction and the lack of depth in the characters cause the viewer to focus on the imagery. |
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Around the age of four months, the cortex begins to refine the connections needed for depth perception and binocular vision. |
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As in the previous series the chresard decreased progressively with the density, but the correspondence with depth was less consistent. |
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Compact a tennis ball sized sample taken at moling depth by hand, then push a pencil through. |
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In spite of Barnes' work, arguments over the strength and depth of Constantine's religious conversion continue. |
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If I may intersert a short speculation, the depth of the sea is determined in Pliny to be fifteen furlongs. |
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The purpose of the water kite is to float beneath or beside the ship at a depth sufficient to insure safety. |
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My mother knew that I was a lapsed Republican, but did not dream of the depth to which I had fallen. |
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The Ten Boer well failed to reach target depth for technical reasons, but was completed as a minor gas producer from the Zechstein carbonates. |
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These steamships quickly became more popular, because the propeller's efficiency was consistent regardless of the depth at which it operated. |
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The vessel also required a depth of water to operate and could not transition to land or other surfaces. |
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The seeds may not be sown to the right depth nor the proper distance from one another. |
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These runners, or drills, opened the furrow to a uniform depth before the seed was dropped. |
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This innovation permitted farmers to have precise control over the depth at which seeds were planted. |
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Seeds sown using a seed drill are distributed evenly and placed at the correct depth in the soil. |
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The reactor units each called for a circular pit over 300ft. in diameter, excavated to a depth of 20ft. to reach a suitable load-bearing stratum. |
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Research shows that country of origin matters for speed and depth of immigrant assimilation but that there is considerable assimilation overall. |
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The magmatic masses are moving at shallow depth in the western part of the Gulf of Pozzuoli. |
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Gauge wheel helps to maintain uniformity in respect of depth of ploughing in different soil conditions. |
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The second part is known as the A2 Level and is more in depth and academically rigorous than the A1 Level. |
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He justified his view on the basis of these composers' depth of evocative expression and their marked individuality. |
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The Edge's distinctive mandolinlike upper-position chord fills took on a more sparkling quality, and Bono added some depth to his singing. |
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In lakes, this means that shores sink in the direction farther away from the former maximum depth of ice. |
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There is no attempt to represent depth in manuscript painting, with all the emphasis on a brilliantly patterned surface. |
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What some see as an expression of spiritual depth in his sitters, others have called mournful, aloof, or even vacant. |
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The play's structure and depth of characterisation have inspired much critical scrutiny. |
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Theron worked alongside the writers and Scott to give more depth to her character during filming. |
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I care about the depth of our partnership, not the length of our phone calls. |
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The small size of the penicillins increases their potency, by allowing them to penetrate the entire depth of the cell wall. |
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Ratios vary depending upon formation pressure, depth of coal and oxidant balance. |
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While UCG leaves the ash behind in the cavity, the depth of the void left after UCG is typically more than other methods of coal extraction. |
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His wartime service and his career as a journalist provided much of the background, detail and depth of the James Bond novels. |
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One of the most effective uses of magnetic pistols would be to set the torpedo's depth to just beneath the keel of the target. |
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Their moulted exoskeletons, faecal pellets, and respiration at depth all bring carbon to the deep sea. |
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Both the depth and the distance from shore strongly influence the biodiversity of the plants and animals present in each region. |
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This ridge is on average only 500 metres deep, only in a few places reaching the depth of 850 metres. |
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The large depth and harsh waters of the Norwegian Sea pose significant technical challenges for offshore drilling. |
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These pressure fluctuations at greater depth are too small to be interesting from the point of view of wave power. |
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In deep water where the water depth is larger than half the wavelength, the wave energy flux is. |
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Deep water corresponds with a water depth larger than half the wavelength, which is the common situation in the sea and ocean. |
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One of Norway's largest is Tyrifjorden at 63 meters above sea level and an average depth at 97 meters most of the lake is under sea level. |
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Due to the relatively great depth of the Cleaver Bank, the soil is only seldom, in very heavy weather, moved by wave action. |
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They were to be armed in a variety of ways, with torpedoes, depth charges or for laying mines. |
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The sea is warmed by the sun to a greater depth than the land due to its greater specific heat. |
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Offshore turbines require different types of bases for stability, according to the depth of water. |
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The epicentre was in the Sandwich area of east Kent at a depth of some ten miles from the surface. |
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Unlike depth charges, mines are deposited and left to wait until they are triggered by the approach of, or contact with, an enemy vessel. |
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Later, the American antenna mine was widely used because submarines could be at any depth from the surface to the seabed. |
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The Soviets had intelligence of what was to come and prepared massive defenses in huge depth in the Kursk salient. |
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Members of Combined Operations Pilotage Parties clandestinely prepared detailed harbour maps, including depth soundings. |
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It was a difficult task that was not achieved because of the depth of the Axis minefields. |
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The probe is marked at the point where it stops, removed, and compared to the subcaudal depth by laying it alongside the scales. |
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Tides cause changes in the depth of the marine and estuarine water bodies and produce oscillating currents known as tidal streams. |
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The Caribbean's depth in its wider basins and deep water temperatures are similar to those of the Atlantic. |
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The location, depth and mechanism of the earthquake are consistent with the event occurring on this subduction zone interface. |
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This plateau has a general depth of 400 fathoms, suddenly dropping off on its eastern edge to over 2000 fathoms. |
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A second order control on trench depth is the age of the lithosphere at the time of subduction. |
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The older the seafloor, the deeper it lies, and this determines the minimum depth from which the seafloor begins to descend. |
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The aphotic zone can be subdivided into three different vertical regions, based on depth and temperature. |
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However the increase in salinity at this depth pushes the water closer to its critical point. |
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During this time, the Nile River delta, among other rivers, extended far beyond its present location, both in depth and length. |
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A flow has both a magnitude and a direction, both of which can vary substantially with depth and over short distances due to local bathymetry. |
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To calculate the actual water depth, add the charted depth to the published tide height. |
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The Benguela oxygen minimum zone starts around a depth of 100 m and is a few hundred meters thick. |
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This is because the age of the oceanic lithosphere provides a major control on the depth of the ocean basins, and therefore on global sea level. |
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Research performed by MBARI found items including plastic bags below 2000m depth off the west coast of North America and around Hawaii. |
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The depth contours, the shoreline and other currents influence the current's direction and strength. |
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This depth depends on how turbid the water is, but in clear water can extend to 200 metres, coinciding with the epipelagic zone. |
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The depth of the mixed layer is thus very important for determining the temperature range in oceanic and coastal regions. |
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The mixed layer is also important as its depth determines the average level of light seen by marine organisms. |
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Neither criterion implies that active mixing is occurring to the mixed layer depth at all times. |
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Rather, the mixed layer depth estimated from hydrography is a measure of the depth to which mixing occurs over the course of a few weeks. |
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The mixed layer depth is in fact greater in winter than summer in each hemisphere. |
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In the past, a typical criterion for MLD was the depth at which the surface temperature cools by some change in temperature from surface values. |
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In a very short time the oxygen saturation can drop to zero when offshore blowing winds drive surface water out and anoxic depth water rises up. |
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This is not caused as popularly supposed by the presence of the Isle of Wight, but is a function of the shape and depth of the English Channel. |
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They were discussed in depth by Julius Caesar in his account of his wars in Gaul. |
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With its range across North America and depth of history, Rangifer tarandus has countless aboriginal names. |
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One thing is certain, that former descriptions of the depth of the incisions cannot be used as evidence for any change. |
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Alternative forms of energy are being explored in depth in a number of unique areas. |
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The depth distribution of water temperature is very inhomogeneous across the sea. |
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In Lake Baikal, the water temperature varies significantly depending on location, depth and time of the year. |
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One unique aspect of its construction is a series of columns which sink into the earth to a depth of about two and a half meters. |
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The differing degrees of word knowledge imply a greater depth of knowledge, but the process is more complex than that. |
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However, the British were seriously handicapped by their misunderstanding of the depth of support for the Patriot position. |
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At its peak, the flood water has reached a depth of one metre against the barrier. |
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Offshore oil and gas has exponentially increasing cost as water depth increases. |
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This tool is mainly used on rivets close to the edge of the fastened material, since the tool is limited by the depth of its frame. |
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However, total proven reserves to a depth of 300 metres are 3,000 million tons. |
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Police divers report a rumour that the garden had been replaced at a depth beyond the lowest they were allowed to dive. |
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At a depth of about 48 m, divers had taken gnomes down and put a picket fence around them. |
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A significant effect of its shallow depth is that for all or most of the time, it has no thermocline. |
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Nonetheless, in general, with the enlargement of the extent of a mere, the depth has to become proportionately less if it is to behave as a mere. |
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Some intrusive rocks solidified in fissures as dikes and intrusive sills at shallow depth and are called subvolcanic or hypabyssal. |
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The blanketing of the ground with a variable depth of peat gives the habitat type its name. |
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The bass have left the cool depth beside the rock and are on the riffle or just below it. |
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The author's novels from her salad years lacked the sophistication and depth of her later works. |
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Mariners on sailing ships would sound the depth of the water with a weighted rope. |
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It rises approximately 2,000m from the surrounding abyssal plain, reaching a water depth of 690m at the top of the feature. |
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It lies in the hadal zone beyond the abyssal zone, and plunges down to a water depth of around 11 kilometers. |
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Don't miss out on the aftershave balm and lotion because they add to the depth of the layers without stifling it. |
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Garden shops now carry hoes with this depth of blade, so that all that has to be done is to cut off the handle to a wieldable length. |
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As the carbon equivalent increases, the depth of the chill decreases until the entire sample is gray, showing a zero chill measurement. |
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But Becker attains much greater depth by interviewing the judge. |
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WellSpring has the depth and technical strength to meet your most stringent delivery or distribution requirements. |
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A biometric sensor is embedded in the wrist band, and the assembly also houses a GPS receiver, a barometer, a depth sensor and a thermometer. |
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Tyre tread depth above 2mm will improve your stopping distance and reduce the risk of aquaplaning. |
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Geothermal energy accumulated in aquifers or in hot dry rocks at a greater depth is a widely used source of energy. |
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Then, a spirit level was placed over sowing furrow and the sowing depth was measured rectangularly to the position of the spirit level. |
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Kier got its bad news into the public arena in July when it revealed the depth of the chill in the housing sector. |
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Ataxic breathing involves less predictable variations in depth and rate of breathing, combined with periods of apnoea. |
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Crosshairs will be placed on the lesion in both the sagittal and axial plane and then the location and depth are calculated. |
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Navy-operated bathyscaphe Trieste carried two men to the deepest known point in the Pacific Ocean, reaching a depth of more than 35,000 feet. |
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An in depth article or two in the magazine on root cellars would be really appreciated. |
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Use a rototiller or shovels to loosen and mix the soil in this entire area to a depth of about 12 inches. |
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Plots of 1-5 years post-disturbance were created by spring rototilling to a depth of ca. |
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As a rule, you should apply a two-inch layer of compost to the soil surface prior to rototilling to a depth of 4-6 inches. |
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However there are big blind spots even with the hood down, such is the depth of the back of the car. |
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Machining practices that can result in rough machined surfaces include dull tools and inadequate depth of cut. |
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The time required to produce one image depends on the imaging depth and the number of scan lines to make each image. |
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Often, blips would fill up a depth layer on the monitors' screens, then move up and down over the course of the night. |
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Water transparency was determined with a Secchi disk and euphotic depth with a submarine photometer. |
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Stylists love doing this because shapes give depth and often a secondary colour, too. |
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Brame in place, the firm has significantly increased the depth of its employment and labor expertise. |
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The 2014 Deep Research Report on Global MDI Industry is a professional and depth research report on Global MDI industry. |
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The shale is located between the Hunton group and the Mississippian Sycamore shales and is found at a depth of 6,000 feet and 14,000 feet. |
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Chill depth in the castings poured with inoculant inserts was greatly reduced, and some of them had the optimum combination of zero chill and low dross. |
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Time depth recorders on auks have shown that they can dive as deep as 100 m in the case of Uria guillemots, 40 m for the Cepphus guillemots and 30 m for the auklets. |
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His book The Pyrenees, published in 1909, shows a depth of detailed knowledge of that region such as would only be gained from personal experience. |
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The Persian Gulf averages about 35 metres in depth and the seabed between Abu Dhabi and Qatar is even shallower, being mostly less than 15 metres deep. |
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