Quartz cementation of siliciclastic successions can develop at moderate burial depths and continue with increasing depth and temperature. |
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The preponderance of early cementation and brecciation towards the top of the Langport Member is compatible with reduced sedimentation rate. |
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Destructive geochemical methods are commonly combined with petrographic methods to interpret the history of rock cementation. |
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Rocks in intermediate-burial settings experience chemical compaction as well as subsurface cementation and dissolution. |
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Pore-filling cementation is also common during the diagenesis of chalks, resulting in rapid porosity loss. |
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Systemp.cem is a eugenol-free self-curing luting cement designed for the temporary cementation of single crowns and larger bridge restorations. |
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Once the required cementation depth has been attained, the part goes on to the production line. |
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Conditioning of the restoration and preparation depends on the cementation method used as well as the cementation material. |
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Paracore is also available in 25 ml cartridges, which is indicated for post cementation and core build-ups only. |
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The shape quality and cementation of the provisional are important details. |
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All-purpose desensitizing temporary cement for short and long-term cementation of temporary restorations and implant-retained crowns. |
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The present study located at the upper part of a catena at Kade in Ghana shows that the gravel consists of iron nodules or pisolites of varying degree of cementation. |
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Thermal stress during firing and masticatory forces after cementation affect metal frameworks. |
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This replacement involved the redesign and replacement of the cementation ovens, of their heating system and of the tubing and control units. |
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Trace fossils are concentrated towards the base of the member, where preferential cementation of the bioturbation has resulted in prominent erosion-resistant horizons. |
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The temperature, the time parts are in the ovens and the fuel media that are used are the factors that determine the depth of cementation. |
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Second visit The cementation of permanent veneers is done two to three weeks later. |
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Shale is fine-grained rock made of silt or wet mud that has been lithified by compaction and cementation. |
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The raw material for this was blister steel, made by the cementation process. |
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Leptodus, a very specialized form characterized by an aberrant morphology, had an oysterlike pedicle valve, which anchored the shell to the substrate and was probably attached to other shells by cementation. |
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Both compaction and cementation decrease the porosity. |
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What fosters the lithification and cementation in the North-West Atlantic but so far not in the North-East Atlantic will become an important matter of discussion. |
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Unlike hot dipping or powder pack cementation, this technique can be used to aluminize specimens selectively without the need for special equipment or halides. |
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This is due to lack of any cementation or digenetic bonding that is characteristics of many over consolidated natural clays and shales. |
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With conventional cementation, the bond is almost entirely created by static friction between the luting material and the restoration, as well as between the luting material and the preparation. |
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Precipitating minerals reduce the pore space in a rock, a process called cementation. |
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It is designed with a thinner, longer brush tip to simplify application for procedures involving confined spaces such as bonding posts, inlay, onlay cementation and sub-gingival application. |
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Differential cementation of a Pleistocene carbonate fanglomerate, Guadalupe Mountains. |
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The Manitoba Technical Advisory Committee also expressed concern about AECL's plan to solidify high-level liquid waste in Phase 1 using a process of cementation, rather than vitrification. |
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Intensive vegetable production in warm climates where three crops per year may be grown on the same land may reduce the soil to a single-grain structure that facilitates surface cementation and poor aeration. |
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Replacement of cyanide salts in the cementation process of steel parts. |
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New methods of producing it by carburizing bars of iron in the cementation process were devised in the 17th century. |
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The cementation process is an obsolete technology for making steel by carburization of iron. |
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Derwentcote Steel Furnace, built in 1720, is the earliest surviving example of a cementation furnace. |
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Another example in the UK is the cementation furnace in Doncaster Street, Sheffield. |
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Kaolincoating in stylolites, effect of quartz cementation and general implications for dissolution at mineral interfaces. |
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The diagenetic processes that have affected the Arab-D reservoir include dolomitization, leaching and recrystallization, cementation, compaction and fracturing. |
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Fracturing rocks at great depth frequently becomes suppressed by pressure due to the weight of the overlying rock strata and the cementation of the formation. |
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Besides supplying Williams with large quantities of plate and equipment Wilkinson also supplied scrap for the process of recovery of copper from solution by cementation. |
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Sedimentary rocks are types of rock that are formed by the deposition and subsequent cementation of that material at the Earth's surface and within bodies of water. |
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Cementation is dominantly by chlorite, with epidote and zeolites also present as cement phases. |
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Standard Wrought Iron bars were placed in the Cementation Furnace for conversion into Cementation or Blister Steel. |
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