On his chin was an enormous pockmark, and surprisingly, a well-trimmed beard. |
|
The rich Chinese expats live in roads free from potholes, which pockmark the rest of the city. |
|
Here three main pockmark and mud diapir fields were observed. |
|
Continuing west, bullet holes and mortar scars still pockmark the concrete. |
|
A number of contrasting geological processes can produce circular structures, ranging from catastrophic gas expulsion to form pockmark craters to meteorite impacts. |
|
It is heresy, sacrilege, a pockmark upon the face of our National Pastime! |
|
The pockmark formed by the 1953 impact isn't large enough to be resolved by earthbound telescopes. |
|
And they feared that the weed-strewn sites where houses once stood would pockmark their neighbourhoods for ever. |
|
Al-Qaeda cells pockmark the fastnesses of the east. |
|
Huge lumps of chalk pockmark the beaches and are proof that nature can create sculptures as impressive as anything on display in the Turner Contemporary. |
|
They are a keystone species, providing food for the foxes and coyotes and shelter for others: many ground dwellers make homes out of the rats' burrows, which pockmark the plain. |
|
Although it is home to seven million migrant workers, the capital appears to be without the squalid shantytowns that pockmark or ring other developing cities, like Mumbai and Rio de Janeiro. |
|
The scars of war are everywhere, even at San Jose primary school, where the doors and windows were casualties of the war and bullet holes pockmark the walls. |
|
The prominent pockmark caught astronomers' attention because, for the most part, the sun has been unexpectedly quiet in the peak year of its 11-year solar cycle. |
|
He had a cross tattoo on his ear with a cross earring with a diamond around it, a large pockmark scab on his right cheek and a smaller pockmark scab under his left cheek. |
|