Micrite can precipitate from seawater or form from the breakdown of larger carbonate grains. |
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Do not expose your jewelry to chemicals or cleaning products, avoid contact with hair products, abrasive soaps, seawater and even tap water. |
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Metabolic clearance rate of GH in trout is also increased following seawater acclimation. |
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It is luxurious and quiet with a range of facilities including its own private beach and a seawater pool and whirlpool overlooking the sea. |
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All crosses raised in normal salinity seawater resulted in five rayed juveniles. |
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These were prepared by collecting live gastropods from the study area, boiling and removing the flesh, rinsing in seawater, and air-drying. |
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Saw wrack is the main seaweed used, taken fresh from the shore, washed in seawater and stored briefly. |
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The inland lake is filled with seawater each day, and stocked with marine fish. |
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The survivor was treated for the effects of drinking seawater, and landed ashore, where he went on to make a full recovery. |
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This phenomenon has been particularly thoroughly studied in land crabs, which often occur in habitats containing both seawater and freshwater. |
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I had to do this while wearing battledress still soaked with seawater from when I waded ashore from the landing craft. |
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Storage aquaria had a constant water supply with nonfiltered seawater at ambient sea temperature. |
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He studied seawater luminescence and ocean temperatures while charting the path of the Gulf Stream. |
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When the boat was sailed on the starboard tack, seawater was siphoning into the boat. |
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Strong winds remove the fertile top soil and seawater intrusion during the rains leaves the soil and water saline. |
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We will be acclimating hatching crocodiles to varying salinities, from fresh water to full-strength seawater. |
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Operation of the magnetohydrodynamic pump unit causes chlorine to be evolved from the seawater in the flow loop. |
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The unexpected point to emerge from the results is that aerated shaking of threads in seawater leads to a permanent hardening or sclerotization. |
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As soon as he was gone, Charlie stalked off to where Lisa and her mother scrubbed potatoes into a bucket and rinsed them off in seawater. |
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This involved sitting in a heated seawater bath while jets massaged her body from top to toe. |
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The thermohaline circulation is driven by differences in seawater density, caused by temperature and salinity. |
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Forming in brackish seawater, layer after layer of mats have left behind clusters of small, sedimentary columns. |
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Aquaculture is the practice of farming with fish and shellfish in both fresh water and seawater. |
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In addition, there will be a huge programme to further improve the quality of drinking water, river and seawater. |
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They obtain most of their water from prey but will drink seawater to satisfy thirst also. |
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More surprising is the general advocacy of the addition of seawater or salt during fermentation. |
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The water vascular system is not filled with seawater as in sea stars and urchins, but rather with a special body fluid. |
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In many areas, fresh water supplies are polluted by seawater, chemicals and sewage. |
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Due to the lack of fresh water, seawater has flowed into six of Chimen's 24 reservoirs. |
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Someone once tried to suggest to me that ocean tides were the result of seawater being pulled about by the moon. |
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Rather than trying to remove the salt from seawater, the plant would use brackish waters from the Thames ebb tide. |
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This greater tolerance may be due to the presence of seawater rather than fresh water. |
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It can be obtained by mining and evaporating water from brines and seawater. |
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I've read many times since that the best way to cook live prawns is to boil them in heavily salted water or, better still, seawater. |
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Because of the high salt content of seawater, it is generally unfit for human consumption. |
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Drinking seawater followed by fresh water was considered a universal remedy. |
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As the atmosphere mixes with surface seawater, carbon dioxide dissolves into the ocean. |
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Frankfurters and hot dogs, for instance, are fave foods for kids, but have about the same concentration of salt as seawater. |
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Indeed, nearly all oil in seawater traces to natural seeps or to human activities creating diffuse releases. |
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The krill then squirt the seawater sideways through their setal filters, entrapping algae in a feeding pattern much like the baleen whales. |
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They have excellent resistance to seawater corrosion and biofouling, but are susceptible to erosion-corrosion at high water velocities. |
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Sideways, blinding rain mixed with seawater blew in sheets, toppling roadside signs for hotels and gas stations. |
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If the cracks extend deep enough, the seawater can come into contact with mantle rocks that underlie the crust. |
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These whales force seawater through baleen plates to filter out the tiny sea creatures. |
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Most of them precipitate before sodium chloride and therefore are left behind as the seawater is moved from one evaporating pond to another. |
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The seawater density in the ocean normally increases with depth, because heavy water sinks and buoyant water rises. |
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Hood Canal is hundreds of feet deep in places, but a shallow sill near its north end restricts seawater exchange. |
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Strontium concentrations in seawater reflect the diagenesis of Sr-rich aragonite to calcite on continental shelves. |
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In seawater, the expelled tubules lengthen considerably and become sticky upon contact with any object. |
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The seawater stream into which the combustion gas is injected is under pressure via the head of water exerted by the seawater reservoir. |
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Stainless steels are positioned towards the cathodic end of the galvanic series in seawater. |
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Carbon filled rubber O-rings and gaskets are widely used in contact with stainless steels in seawater. |
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Each Melibe was suspended by hooks from its dorsal integument in a chamber continuously perfused with natural seawater. |
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Organic chelators that are thought to be of recent biological origin control copper speciation in seawater. |
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Plasma levels of GH increase following seawater exposure of coho, chum and Atlantic salmon and rainbow trout. |
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It contains structures called hydrothermal vents, which spew superheated fluids into the seawater. |
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Apart from a tiny percentage of the world's population, who drink desalinated seawater, the only water we drink is rainwater. |
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Through the comb-like bristles of its baleen filters, it squirts out the seawater, entrapping krill by the bushel. |
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Iron is mostly complexed with the organic ligands or colloids that are very abundant in natural seawater. |
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As to the rate of seawater inflow and the effect of wind and waves, there would be immense problems of prediction. |
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It can be prepared chemically and is obtained by mining and evaporating water from seawater and brines. |
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Marine amoebae are not in danger of lysis or crenation because seawater and their cytoplasm are isotonic. |
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What do a few buckets of waste mean anyway, in the grand scheme of things as you bob up and down atop gazillions of gallons of seawater? |
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These tiles were preconditioned by being placed outdoors in a running seawater table for several weeks before their use in the experiment. |
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Stemming from the Latin word marinus, or marine, the word refers to the seawater used to preserve food before the advent of refrigeration. |
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Therefore, a two-fold dilution was used to estimate the number of degraders in seawater. |
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Alternative sources such as reclaimed wastewater and desalinated seawater are options in some locales. |
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They agreed to use nuclear technology to desalinate seawater or the conversion of seawater into fresh water, salt and electricity in Madura. |
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Irrigation of the land with seawater desalinated by fusion power is ancient. |
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We have also to ensure that seawater is not able to make encroachments on the land. |
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In each of these settings, progressive evaporation of seawater leads to precipitation of calcite and gypsum followed by halite. |
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Among the gravels there were shiny crystals of the mineral gypsum, the residue left behind when seawater evaporates. |
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This global regression subsequently led to the withdrawal of seawater from a large part of the Pangean shelves and epicontinental seas. |
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A pet that appears to be having a heat stroke can be doused with seawater, or sprayed with a dockside hose to cool him off quickly. |
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When it drinks seawater, the animal excretes salt though the tears, which are simply a concentrated salt solution. |
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As the dredge dropped to the seafloor, instruments attached to its cable measured the temperature and optical properties of the seawater. |
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The water of the lake is a mixture of karst water, which is drinkable, and a little salty seawater from the nearby Mediterranean Sea. |
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There is no drinking water because wells and water supplies have been flooded by seawater. |
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Removal of crab from seawater causes significant physical and physiological stress on the crab that can lead to mortality during transport and distribution. |
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Anguilla is an arid, flat Caribbean island surrounded on all sides by seawater. |
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The circulation of fluids that forms this new class of hydrothermal vents apparently is driven by heat generated when seawater reacts with mantle rocks, not by volcanic heat. |
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These mud-shrimp are restricted to the lower intertidal of estuarine mouth areas, on muddy point bars that are in continuous contact with normal marine seawater. |
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Magnesium is found in seawater and as the mineral carnallite, a combination of potassium chloride and magnesium chloride, at the Stassfurt Mine in Germany. |
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As the landslide material comes to rest on the deep-sea floor, the sudden displacement of a huge vertical column of seawater can kick up deadly tsunamis across wide areas. |
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Gandhi's satyagraha in India, where tens of thousands of villagers defied the British Raj's tax on sail by drying seawater in the 1940s, is another well-known example. |
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One of the most relaxing treatments it offers is the hydromassage, where you relax in a bath of warm seawater while a pressure-adjustable hose is played over your body. |
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The previously unknown species lived about 25 million years ago and was an early ancestor of modern baleen whales, which feed by filtering plankton from seawater. |
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Valve overlap, a process that helps engines run more efficiently, can also cause marinized engines to ingest the seawater used to cool their exhaust systems. |
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The seawater was higher than the fire hydrants, and the firefighters had to duck down into it to connect the hose. |
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Pure water is the key to thalassotherapy, a seawater treatment. |
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Five feet of seawater tore through the streets of the low-lying Brooklyn neighborhood Monday night. |
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The circulation of fluids that forms this new class of hydrothermal vents is driven by heat generated when seawater reacts with mantle rocks, not by volcanic heat. |
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Under proposals presented to the European Commission on Friday, 20 seawater desalination plants will provide an extra 721 cubic hectometres of water to affected regions. |
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Only two months were left of our field season, and that was spent largely on cross-country skis, hauling sleds laden with carboys full of seawater. |
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Okada's descriptions were from sections of paraffin-embedded material that had been fixed in Flemming's solution or a saturated solution of mercuric chloride in seawater. |
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He was able to then clear enough seawater to respire effectively. |
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Additional evidence for a role for estrogen in anthozoan reproduction comes from measurements of estrogen release into seawater prior to or during spawning events. |
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There were places where the seawater actually boiled, like river rapids. |
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Lead anodes also have high resistance to corrosion by seawater, making them economical to use in systems for the cathodic protection of ships and offshore rigs. |
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The two leaders agreed to work together in advancing techniques for desalinating seawater to cope with perennial water shortages in Saudi Arabia, the official said. |
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These might contain a couple of feet of water or a mere stream when the tide ebbs, but quickly become deep, surging rivers of seawater when it flows. |
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Water used for this purpose must be drinking water or clean seawater. |
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The rest of the plasma is very much like seawater, an ocean of life. |
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The organ works off the swell of the seawater at high tide, which creates air pressure in the pipes leading to a sequence of musical chords based on the harmonic series. |
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The bomb was put in an anchored frigate, HMS Pym, and when it exploded at 8am local time on October 3rd thousands of tons of rock, mud and seawater were blasted into the air. |
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The seawater providing a natural electrolyte between the two metals. |
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Gametes are generally released into the seawater under calm conditions and the eggs are fertilised externally to produce a zygote. |
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The carbon dioxide reacts with water molecules, creating more free hydrogen ions that drive down the pH of seawater and make it more acidic. |
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That's because, each day, Earth's atmosphere recycles billions of kiloliters of salty seawater and turns it into fresh water. |
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The seawater once covering 26,000 square miles vanishes into desert. |
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Scooping up several salps from the sea, the researchers dropped them into buckets of seawater thick with Noctiluca blooms. |
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A through-hull, seacock and strainer are needed for the seawater supply and an above-waterline through-hull needed for the seawater discharge. |
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But more acidic conditions tend to reduce the amount of borate in seawater. |
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Presumably, mosquitofish are like other secondary-division freshwater fishes, in that their blood is isosmotic with seawater diluted to 7-10 ppt. |
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Warm surface seawater is pumped through a heat exchanger where a low-boiling-point fluid, such as ammonia, is vapourised. |
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Then, 15 years or so ago, the seawall was breached, allowing seawater to penetrate a brackish pond used to farm milkfish. |
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The dead zone is caused by hypoxia, a condition in which oxygen levels in seawater drop to dangerously low levels. |
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At the bottom of ocean basins, often near sites of volcanic or tectonic activity, these hydrothermal vents emit geothermally heated seawater. |
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The constellation was associated with the goddess Tiamat the ruler of the seawater who according to legend kills her offspring. |
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The study will identify up to 20 potential seawater demineralization facility sites for further evaluation. |
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Such reactions may involve dimethylmercury, which is present in seawater at very low levels. |
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Although this low-salinity water will require some desalinization, it will be much less costly to desalinate than seawater. |
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The company dewatered seawater trapped within the cofferdam in only 45 days, in preparation for the construction. |
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Though they can drink seawater, pinnipeds get most of their fluid intake from the food they eat. |
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The abundance of rocks formed by seawater precipitation is in the same order as the precipitation given above. |
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Climate change can reportedly trigger volcanic activity in sensitive areas by changing pressure of ice or seawater and extreme weather. |
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The salt concentration in cetacean blood is lower than that in seawater, requiring kidneys to excrete salt. |
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Droughts affect water supply in Southern Spain, which increasingly is turning towards seawater desalination to meet its water needs. |
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The temperature of maximum density of seawater decreases as its salt content increases. |
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This zone is permanently covered with seawater and is approximately equivalent to the neritic zone. |
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A useful side effect of the system is that collected seawater is relatively pure because of sand's filtration effect. |
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When the tunnel valley was free of ice and seawater, it was occupied by the river. |
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They result from seawater becoming heated after seeping through cracks to places where hot magma is close to the seabed. |
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Joleah Lamb found that seagrass meadows may be able to remove various disease pathogens from seawater. |
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To keep seawater out, these oar holes were sealed with wooden disks from the inside, when the oars were not in use. |
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The tank's engine was converted to be cooled with seawater, and the exhaust pipes were fitted with overpressure valves. |
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Sedimentary rocks are often saturated with seawater or groundwater, in which minerals can dissolve, or from which minerals can precipitate. |
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Desalination of abundant seawater is a more expensive solution used in coastal arid climates. |
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The temperature of the surface of the Arctic Ocean is fairly constant, near the freezing point of seawater. |
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Offshore, temperatures are also low enough that ice is formed from seawater through most of the year. |
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When one of the rifts opens into the existing ocean, the rift system is flooded with seawater and becomes a new sea. |
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These thermodynamic conditions exceed the critical point of seawater, and are the highest temperatures recorded to date from the seafloor. |
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In the North Atlantic, seawater at the surface of the ocean is intensely cooled by the wind and low ambient air temperatures. |
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Increasing salinity lowers the freezing point of seawater, so cold liquid brine is formed in inclusions within a honeycomb of ice. |
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The difference between the corresponding date and the collection date of the seawater sample is the average age for the water parcel. |
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The Sunderlands were particularly used for transporting salt, as their airframes were already protected against corrosion from seawater. |
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Very high surface temperatures and high salinities make this one of the warmest and saltiest bodies of seawater in the world. |
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During extraction of salt from seawater by evaporation, potassium salts get concentrated in bittern, an effluent from the salt industry. |
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However, pH measurement is complicated by the chemical properties of seawater, and several distinct pH scales exist in chemical oceanography. |
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To resolve this problem, an alternative series of buffers based on artificial seawater was developed. |
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As a consequence, for most practical purposes, the difference between the total and seawater scales is very small. |
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Since it omits consideration of sulfate and fluoride ions, the free scale is significantly different from both the total and seawater scales. |
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Because of the relative unimportance of the fluoride ion, the total and seawater scales differ only very slightly. |
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The salt factory is a key connecting element in the seawater infrastructure. |
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It took almost to noon, and quite a bit of slow, careful rolling, and more than a few snootfuls of seawater, but finally he was free. |
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Gypsum forms in sediment when seawater becomes supersalty as it evaporates in warm, tropical environments. |
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The Thames contains both sea water and fresh water, thus providing support for seawater and freshwater fish. |
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The key to his approach was finding halophyte plants that can be grown on seawater coasts. |
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Anodizing was first used in 1923 to protect Duralumin seaplane components from seawater corrosion. |
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The company is building a plant that will desalinate seawater. |
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These antifoulings release the biocides by a hydrolysis or ion exchange reaction of an acrylic polymer with seawater. |
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The amount of light penetrating the seawater also varies with depth and turbidity. |
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Most water demand is currently satisfied through seawater desalination plants. |
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By the start of 1856, Darwin was investigating whether eggs and seeds could survive travel across seawater to spread species across oceans. |
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In addition, freshwater demand is curtailed by the use of seawater for toilet flushing, using a separate distribution system. |
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Two Dragonfly helicopters flew in to gather a sample of contaminated seawater from the lagoon. |
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These small lagoons off of the main lagoon are filled with seawater at high tide and dry at low tide. |
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Kuwait's fresh water resources are limited to groundwater, desalinated seawater, and treated wastewater effluents. |
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With the exception of the seawater intrusion criterion, the others have been accepted or elaborated upon by other hydrology publications. |
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Based on the published values of 2 to 64 ppb of gold in seawater a commercially successful extraction seemed possible. |
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After harvest, mussels are typically placed in seawater tanks to rid them of impurities before marketing. |
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Having fresh seawater readily available, the periwinkles are first graded if possible, using a machine custom built for the purpose. |
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Brackish water or briny water is water that has more salinity than fresh water, but not as much as seawater. |
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It may result from mixing of seawater with fresh water, as in estuaries, or it may occur in brackish fossil aquifers. |
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The TDU is also flushed with seawater to ensure it is completely empty and the ball valve is clear before closing the valve. |
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Fresh water floats on top of the seawater in a layer that gradually thins as it moves seaward. |
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In mariculture, the phytoplankton is naturally occurring and is introduced into enclosures with the normal circulation of seawater. |
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The chlorophyll-a concentration in the rearing water was measured fluorometrically after filtration of the seawater sample through a glass fiber filter. |
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In coastal mixing zones, pore water throughput is facilitated by the convergence of two forces, gravity drive from meteoric water and density drive from seawater. |
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Brackish water condition commonly occurs when fresh water meets seawater. |
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We gave him thermal blankets and the rescue team at the scene believed he needed to go to hospital in case of secondary drowning which can happen in seawater incidents. |
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Warm seawater expands and is thus less dense than cooler seawater. |
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I went for the 20-minute Affusion Shower where warm droplets of seawater fell like a fine rain on my outstretched body as the therapist gave me a toe to head massage. |
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The patent-pending seawater antenna, recently coined the Electrolytic Fluid Antenna, was on display at the SPAWAR exhibit at AFCEA West 2011, Jan. |
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Contract Awarded for Supplying its Procera water filtration equipment package for a seawater desalination plant expansion project in Hato on the Caribbean island of Bonaire. |
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Sea floor electrometers which measure the average speed of an ocean current by sensing the electric field created by salty seawater moving through the earth's magnetic field. |
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The trip turned to tragedy when it was decided to allow seawater into the torpedo tubes to add weight to the submarine as it was having difficulty diving. |
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As a velocity difference develops between the two layers, shear forces generate internal waves at the interface, mixing the seawater upward with the freshwater. |
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Organic material tends to be denser than seawater, so it sinks into open ocean ecosystems away from the coastlines, transporting carbon along with it. |
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Hybrids between O. mossambicus and other less-tolerant strains also show relatively fast growth rates in brackishwater and full-strength seawater. |
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Liquids in intimate contact with metals, such as seawater, acids alkides and alkalies, are serious corroders for a large variety of metals and alloys. |
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He was crazed with thirst and resorted to drinking seawater. |
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Olfactory responses of lobsters to solutions from prey species and to seawater extracts and chemical fractions of fish muscle and effects of antennule ablation. |
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Initially, when the ice began melting about 10,300 BP, seawater filled the isostatically depressed area, a temporary marine incursion that geologists dub the Yoldia Sea. |
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However, fish were not fed during the experiment and the low salinity during exposure should not cause drinking of seawater for ionoregulatory purposes. |
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The lowest counts of less than 32 parts per thousand are found in the far north as less evaporation of seawater takes place in these frigid areas. |
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Like a flipped switch, the normal response of nerve cells can reverse as acidifying seawater perturbs how a fish regulates acids and bases in its body, including the brain. |
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To determine the chemical composition of seawater at various depths from the surface to the bottom, the organic matter in solution and the particles in suspension. |
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The soil in coastal plains, such as Salalah, have shown increased levels of salinity, due to over exploitation of ground water and encroachment by seawater on the water table. |
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In this method, seawater is pumped into a pressure chamber that is at a pressure lower than the difference between the pressures of saline water and fresh water. |
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Vertical wells can cause salt upconing into the lens, and overextraction will reduce freshwater pressure resulting in lateral intrusion by seawater. |
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Researchers looking at sediment, seawater, biota, and seafood found toxic compounds in high concentrations that they said was due to the added oil and dispersants. |
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The bristles filter krill and other small invertebrates from seawater. |
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The changes in oceanic biology and vertical mixing between winter and summer in the North Atlantic Gyre seasonally alter the total amount of carbon dioxide in the seawater. |
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The contemporary fad for drinking and bathing in seawater as a purported cure for illnesses was enthusiastically encouraged by Dr Richard Russell from nearby Lewes. |
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Early Cambrian specimens filtered microscopic plankton from the seawater. |
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In hydrology, an oceanic basin may be anywhere on Earth that is covered by seawater, but geologically ocean basins are large geologic basins that are below sea level. |
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Sea ice is frozen seawater that floats on the ocean surface. |
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A bottled seawater product known as IAPSO Standard Seawater is used by oceanographers to standardize their measurements with enough precision to meet this requirement. |
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Water from rivers and lakes tends to contain less deuterium than seawater. |
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