Approximately 5 to 10 mg of powder was drilled from each tooth after the surface had been abraded to remove possible contamination. |
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According to them, the genome of the ostrich has the ability to let the skin form calluses when the skin is abraded. |
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The painted surface is splotchy, as if damp or abraded, and the piece as a whole is very subdued. |
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Split skin grafting is another technique in which the white patch is covered by skin after it is abraded. |
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By a woody grain printing process, a woody grain pattern is printed on the abraded surface. |
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When dry and hard the ground was scraped and abraded to a smooth flat surface, especially important if there were to be areas of gilding. |
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By the final moments, cometary dust will have abraded the camera's optics, degrading the quality of the images, and possibly ending transmission. |
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Heavy machines then pounded and abraded them to make the surfaces smooth and uniform. |
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Nothing had gotten past them, but the lenses were badly abraded by the hurtling glass particles from the bullet-pierced windshield. |
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Dermal application of desoximetasone on intact or abraded skin was studied in rats, rabbits and dogs. |
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Cupping or cratering is present with abraded enamel edges from the mulling action. |
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The technique requires that the operator have considerable experience and skill so that the stone surface itself is not abraded. |
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The powder abraded from the two stones during the operation is carefully preserved for use in grinding. |
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This substance can be absorbed through intact or abraded skin causing systemic effects. |
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Make sure the skin is not abraded or bruised, or else this will cause pain and inflammation in the chilblains. |
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This may damage surfaces and abraded particles may contaminate preparations. |
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Sures must have had tongue in cheek when she contrived Ghirlandina, a cast-paper relief of an old, crooked, leaning tower, wonderfully abraded and polychromed. |
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The smear layer is an artificial surface structure that is formed when dentine is abraded or cut. |
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A newly designed bond formula ensures that there is no build-up of abraded material and results in consistent material removal. |
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If the recoat time is passed the surface must be mechanically abraded and wiped clean. |
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An important area of future investigation would be microwear studies to gain insights into the nature of the food that abraded animals teeth in the few days before they died. |
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In general, however, cuticular development is not usually impaired, although the leaf surface may become abraded by the action of wind and wind-borne particles. |
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In the 1950s, hand scrubbing required the use of rough brushes with stiff bristles that abraded the skin and frequently increased bacterial counts. |
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Lacerations generally are ragged tears in the skin with abraded margins. |
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The reference electrode consisted of a second silver-silver chloride electrode placed over an area of abraded skin on the forearm, again connected to the voltmeter. |
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If the recoat time is passed, the existing top coat surface must be mechanically abraded, vacuumed and wiped clean with a lint free, solvent-dampened cloth. |
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The insulation of the electrical cable supplying power to the wheel-house dc rectifier was abraded where it passed through a thin vertical panel at the top of the locker in which the hot water heater was located. |
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Aircraft engines and helicopter rotor-blades are constantly abraded by atmospheric dust, and a way of slowing down this abrasion would be welcome. |
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Prior to processing, specimens were abraded or cut to expose the mesocarp, and sometimes the endocarps were fractured. |
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At the same time, the shaft struck the top deck so violently that it abraded the rivets and skin, leaving traceable metal flow on the contact areas. |
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The stitches, however, do not mesh with the fabric but protrude above the surface of the sail, causing the sail twine to become abraded more rapidly than with other sailcloth. |
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Abrasion areas on Kronotex laminate floors must be clearly visible and at least 1cm² in size. And in particular the design layer must be completely abraded. |
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Furthermore, the system has to work at high temperatures and eliminate contaminants such as abraded particles, oxidised particles, water and air bubbles. |
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If cutter teeth have hit hard objects such as nails and stones, or have been abraded by mud or sand on the wood, have service dealer sharpen chain. |
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Many of the vertical surfaces that face the congregation-the shafts of the columns, the vertical surfaces of the right side of the predella, and the large niche in the left wing-are also heavily abraded. |
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Most of the impact mark exhibited a relatively shiny surface which appeared to have been created as a result of the surface being deformed as well as abraded by a metal object. |
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Particularly in the case of ceramic veneers over an implanted superstructure, it is essential to ensure anatomically correct results when repairing abraded soft tissue surfaces. |
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Engineering Laboratory concluded that the cable failed because of the presence of broken and abraded wires, which reduced the strength to below that necessary to react to service loads. |
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But these components do more than just protect drivers and passengers against pollens: particle filters also arrest pollutants like dust, abraded rubbings or soot. |
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They are pecked or abraded on heavily jointed and fractured gabbro and granophyre igneous rock surfaces that have weathered into massive linear piles. |
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