Even after the blowout had been brought under control, the oil continued to seep out of the ocean floor, he says. |
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But players seep through the cracks, and every season more players make spending a quick buck on a minor leaguer worth every penny. |
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The bacteria colonise rinds and seep into the paste to produce cheeses that are tangy or spiky, creamy or grassy. |
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Once I see the oniony liquid start to seep out, I'll add the vinegar to it. |
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Concerned, I checked it and found that it only wet the cover over the pillow and did not seep to the pillow itself. |
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Though the cracks were tiny, it was enough to allow an oily liquid seep through at several points, covering the floor. |
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Leaves accumulating in gutters can lead to blockages and allow water to seep into roofs. |
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Once text is digital, books seep out of their bindings and weave themselves together. |
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Delegates were sceptical because they had seen the head of steam built up through strike action last year allowed to seep away. |
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He threw open the blackout curtains of heavy, dark velvet, letting the rosy light of dawn seep into the room. |
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Workmen laying a gas pipe drilled through an existing main, causing gas to seep into the cellar of the house. |
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A lone cottonwood on the plains might mark a hillside seep or a spot where the water table was within digging distance. |
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This seep assemblage is unusual for an ancient cold-seep site, because it was apparently dominated by one species of vestimentiferan. |
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It is believed there was a fault in the underground pipeline which caused aviation fuel to seep out. |
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The elegance of the juxtapositions, presented with utmost tact and finesse, allowed associations to seep into our minds almost unbidden. |
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Tired of bandying words with this charlatan, I allow my fury to seep into my eyes. |
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Concerns are that oil and diesel could leak from lorries at the container terminal and seep into the sea and wetlands. |
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Fitz is a character filled with flaws and faults, all just waiting for a fissure to weep and seep out of. |
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Still, much as one enjoys the giddiness as reality and fiction seep into each other, there is still something wilfully costive about it. |
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Then that mixture of gasoline and oil would seep down into the crankcase, diluting the engine oil even further. |
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Some of that fuel would inevitably seep down into the crankcase and dilute your oil. |
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Either the water inlet valve in the back of the frig is allowing water to seep past it even when its turned off. |
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The contact caused a small crack in the wing, allowing hot gas to seep in on re-entry, destroying the wing and dooming the crew. |
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Several other revelations have begun to seep out in the wake of O'Brien's forced defenestration. |
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Cold seep communities thrive on cooler, mineralized water leaking from the muddy sea floor. |
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Hydrothermal vents result from undersea cracks in the earth's crust, which allow lava and hot fluids to seep out. |
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Because cement is such a dense, hard material it puts stone under pressure, cracks it and allows water to seep into the interior. |
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Mr Ward said the droppings had blocked the gutters and downpipes on the building, causing water to seep into the roof timbers. |
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I'd been sitting on the grass for ten minutes and felt the wetness seep through my jeans. |
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Over the next half-day, opium will seep out through these holes in the form of a milky sap that can be scraped off the side of the pod. |
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When Jesus Christ died on the cross as your supreme sin sacrifice, His blood didn't just seep into the ground and return to dust. |
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The slow seep through the garden wall made the whole area under the grapes a muddy swamp. |
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This step is important because, if you crack the plaster and then antique it using the reinkers, the ink will seep into your entire image making it too dark. |
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Part of the decomposition process causes bodies to bloat and blood to sometimes seep from the mouth. |
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In other words, take a minute to really be conscious of the emotion, instead of just letting it seep in. |
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Cracks and pinholes can allow carbon monoxide and other exhaust gases to leak into the cabin, causing one part of CO per 20,000 parts of air to seep into a person's system. |
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The lint-free cloth, lens tissue or cotton swab should be moistened with solvent, but not be wet enough for the solvent to seep around the lens. |
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These fears seep into the romantic sphere, where commitment becomes yet another risky venture. |
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Elsewhere, flashes of Jamaican rocksteady and Latin beats and melodies seep into the stitching of this singular songsmith to fit his quirky design. |
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Both of these concrete products allow rainwater to seep into the ground, recharging groundwater levels and reducing stormwater runoff. |
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If you cannot plant a tree or garden, make a hollow in the ground filled with rocks or gravel for the water to seep into. |
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These solvents can seep into groundwater where they break down very slowly, contaminating water supplies years after pollution has stopped. |
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The words seep into you little by little, always with the author's image alongside. |
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Although protected from sunlight, salt water can seep into the cavity and saturate the textile. |
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Tea is one of the few plants whose leaves accumulate large amounts of aluminum that can seep into the brewed beverage. |
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The barriers slow down the progress of water and allow it to seep into the ground. |
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Seawater can also seep into groundwater and is a common problem in coastal areas. |
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The cultivation of crops causes chemicals from fertilizers and pesticides to seep into the groundwater. |
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Warnings of global warming had only just begun to seep into the mainstream media when cattle were first fingered as culprits. |
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Within these pages, some of the joy, excitement, and enthusiasm, as well as the frustration and disappointment, seep into the text. |
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It contains no resinous binder that will seep into the surrounding wood fibers. |
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He lets the grapes wither in the crate and the juices seep through drop by drop which give a rather syrupy result. |
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Even in places such as Egypt, where much of the domestic media is state-friendly, images of corpses seep out. |
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If the ocean continues to rise, before long the salt water will begin to seep through from under the walls. |
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This is a natural seep of oil sands, of which there are several along the Athabasca River. |
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Bruises form when blood cells seep from injured veins or capillaries into surrounding skin tissue. |
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Progress in one country will inevitably seep across borders and benefit the wider region. |
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The bleeding stops shortly after the extraction, however some blood might seep out up to 48 hours after the procedure. |
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Billions of euros from our common budget continue to seep out into dubious channels or are cast aimlessly to the four winds. |
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There is a tendency for water to seep away where the new soil joins the original ground layer. |
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He needs patience, because it may take months or years for his new methods to seep down to machine level and become routine. |
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And it goes completely to pieces on the really submicroscopic scale, when the colors of quantum mechanics start to seep through into the picture, but that's another story. |
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If water cannot seep in, the roots become dehydrated and lose anchorage. |
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Good macaroni cheese needs pasta with big holes, such as traditional long macaroni or, failing that, rigatoni, that the creamy luscious sauce can seep into. |
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When they seep into the water table, and into rivers, lakes, and oceans, PCBs bioaccumulate, moving up the food chain from the phytoplankton to the zooplankton to the fish. |
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The man is so full of hatred, vitriol and self-loathing that it is all beginning to seep into his columns so much that they have become almost unreadable. |
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Prepare everything 48 hours in advance to allow the sugary chocolate to become gooey and sticky and begin to seep into the layers of creamy cranberry. |
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On the veg plot, or to keep recently planted borders moist, install a seep or porous hose, which can be fixed to a rain barrel. |
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Freedom will seep into the bedrock as we rediscover our backbone. |
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Use separate stones and porous materials instead of concrete for walkways, driveways, and patios so that water will seep into the ground rather than draining into the sewer systems. |
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Serious depletion of forests there increases the rate of spring flooding and sends cascading down rivers the water that should seep into the ground to maintain our underground reservoirs. |
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Once-fertile soils become compacted and crusted, causing valuable rainwater to run off rather than seep into the ground and carrying with it precious topsoil and nutrients. |
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In this normal mouthing toxins, and phthalates are particularly vulnerable to this, seep or leach out of the product into the saliva and are consumed and absorbed by the body. |
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Petraeus allowed no daylight to seep in between himself and the president. |
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British shale gas is set for a slow seep rather than another explosion. |
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Seepiophila jonesi, a new genus and species of vestimentiferan tube worm from hydrocarbon seep communities in the Gulf of Mexico. |
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And it takes time for world events to seep into the culture. |
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If the polyester is not fully cured, styrene will seep out. |
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I recently discovered microorganisms in minuscule water droplets entrapped in oil from a natural oil seep. |
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During the hearing, the Commission sought clarification of the long-term management plans for the existing waste rock piles, particularly the B-Zone pile, from which contaminants continue to seep and require treatment. |
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However, it is the large-sized rhynchonellids that have been most readily identified to date as members of ancient hydrocarbon seep communities. |
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High-temperature processing and extensive pasteurization of vacuum-packed crabsticks often cause the colorant to seep or bleed. |
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With the support of feminists in progressive developing and developed countries around the world, reinventing globalization will slowly seep into the realm of the possible, but ultimately, it must begin at home. |
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The diagram also shows that when water lands on the earth's surface it can seep into the soil through a process called infiltration, and deeper underground to the water table by percolation. |
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High-minded constitutionalism will not simply seep into society. |
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Biomarkers of hydrocarbon exposure and sublethal effects in embiotocid fishes from a natural petroleum seep in the Santa Barbara Channel. |
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Wind, fire and smoke prevented helicopter landings and no further instructions were given, with smoke beginning to seep into the personnel block. |
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Chemosynthetic communities thrive where cold fluids seep out of the forearc. |
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Another unusual feature found in the abyssal and hadal zones is the cold seep, sometimes called a cold vent. |
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One major seamount risk is that often, in the late of stages of their life, extrusions begin to seep in the seamount. |
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These are believed to live in an area where hydrocarbons are released from the sea bed, known as a cold seep. |
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We're worried that the poison will seep down into the river under the ground and poison our muku and tjala, witchetty grubs and honey ants. |
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Abundance really does seep into your soul. |
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Surely the proppants won't seep into groundwater. |
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This project is the third phase of gas seep mapping and monitoring in the Las Animas County portion of the Raton Basin. |
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The city has hired Interwest Construction of Burlington to place a specially amended layer of sand and clay over the oil seep. |
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Chevron has identified a small new seep in the field and subsidence in the area. |
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White House energy adviser Carol Browner told the CBS television that the seep was found less than 3 kilometers from the well site. |
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Furthermore, residual chemicals coat surfaces and can seep into the walls, floor and furniture of a property, so it remains contaminated for months or years after the initial manufacturing process. |
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This may be the case for a heavily polluted soil around a factory smokestack, or where substances that are hazardous to water could seep into the soil due to their storage or transfer. |
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However, the pores are also a core weakness: they are a pathway for chloride salts and other chemicals to seep into concrete causing cracking and deterioration that costs the Canadian economy billions of dollars annually. |
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Watersheds not only allow an area for water to drain and seep into the ground, they provide important habitat for both aquatic and terrestrial wildlife. |
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Feel your muscles being kneaded and the tension seep away from your body as you drift off to soothing music and enter a realm of blissful happiness and total relaxation. |
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You can use it to seal up your windows so nothing can seep in. |
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During reactions, the catalytic agent will sometimes seep into the final product and contaminate it. |
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Charles Neff's Hidden Impact originates with the frontward access of the narrator's Atlantic Airlines flight swinging out to let soggy stickiness to seep into the compartment. |
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These areas around the Barents Sea still seep methane today. |
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Late Sunday, Allen said a seep was detected near the ruptured oil well and demanded in a sharply worded letter that BP step up monitoring of the ocean floor. |
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Late Sunday, Allen said a seep had been detected a distance from the oil well and demanded in a sharply worded letter that BP step up monitoring of the ocean floor. |
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Ground water of seeps usually flows through sand and gravel deposits above an impervious soil layer to the outlet area where it forms a distinct seep line. |
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The grass is rich and matted, you cannot see the soil. It holds the rain and the mist, and they seep into the ground, feeding the streams in every kloof. |
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Some of that fuel may even seep past the piston rings and into the oil. |
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Native plants like Fremont cottonwood and seep willow have recolonized treated areas, and springs that were nearly sucked dry from tamarisk are returning to historical flows. |
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For vegetarians, the key offering is Achaar ke Aloo, which is cooked two days before it is served in order to give the pickled spices enough time to seep into the potatoes. |
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