They got off the bus and were led, leg chains clanking and dragging on the cobbles as they shuffled along, following the warder. |
|
Stepping out onto the cobbles in front of the steps, the men found themselves at the center of a loose circle of guardsman. |
|
At 12 of the sites that have imbricated cobbles, clast orientations were measured to derive the palaeocurrent direction. |
|
A Coronation Street spokesperson has acknowledged the complaints and promised that they are on the case to sort out the cobbles. |
|
Daniel laughed, brushed a piece of his blond hair from his eyes, and tried to skip another stone on the cobbles. |
|
The faulty shearing machines are repaired, the broken cobbles are mended and the new by-pass built. |
|
Pulling herself painfully up, she wobbled shakily on the cobbles, catching the icy metal of the lamp-post next to her to steady herself. |
|
I complete it by slowly walking down the steps on the other side of the bridge, and turn on the polished cobbles of the old street. |
|
In cross-section, the deposits consist of unsorted pebbles, cobbles, and boulders in a matrix of fine-grained debris. |
|
It's a place of heavy timber and half-timber houses and a central market square covered in cobbles, all reminiscent of earlier times. |
|
The streets shifted with no apparent rhyme or reason from flagstone to cobbles to brick and back again. |
|
They were only cobbles and small, irregular outcrops, not large ledges of obviously layered strata. |
|
The flood water tugs at the cobbles, sometimes moving them bit by bit toward someplace, anyplace, downstream. |
|
On the cobbles in front of the lower site, he saw James lugging his heavy bag to the coach driver, who shoved it into the coach's large hold. |
|
Following winter storms, cobbles and rocky platforms are exposed, and the sand beach may only partially recover during the low waves of summer. |
|
My boots thumped against cobbles and breath rasped in my lungs as the guard tried one door, then another. |
|
At 0300 hours the mist had lifted and the yellow light from the gas lamps cast a ghostly radiance that was reflected from the wet road cobbles. |
|
It is maintained with smooth rounded cobbles from the seashore, used just as they were thousands of years ago. |
|
I drag myself over the grey cobbles to the door, my heart in my ears, my feet stumbling, the grey weather scowling at me. |
|
The evening time trial was raced on a challenging, technical circuit, with hills and cobbles. |
|
|
Down the cobbles, two buildings away, is an old house with a back lawn leading down to the millstream that still runs through the city. |
|
Orthoclase occurred as remnant phenocrysts in a groundmass of chloritic material resulting from alteration of iron-rich felsite cobbles. |
|
In the middle of the roadway beneath the window, the Vizier's ivory rose lay pristine on the muddy cobbles. |
|
Where Charles used to operate a small ferry the Salt River is now vacant land, a moonscape of cobbles and sand. |
|
A thin conglomerate, with Miocene carbonate clasts bored by bivalves, and volcanic cobbles, occurs at the base. |
|
The cobbles are very uneven and worn smooth by nine centuries of hooves and shoes, and as the mist becomes drizzle, they turn damp and slippery. |
|
I collapse the antenna and walk back along the cobbles, thinking again of the man who overwintered in this area. |
|
Running her hand down along the side, she crouched in the shadows and reached to the bottom, where the stair met the well-worn cobbles. |
|
The white cobbles burnt the soles of her feet even through her tough slippers. |
|
They could remove three rows of cobbles and install a speed bump in its place. |
|
At other locations protesters were seen digging up cobbles to throw at police and several tried to pull down fences to make improvised weapons. |
|
The noise of his feet on the cobbles woke the dogs of the town, who barked as if they meant to break their chains. |
|
His head pounded with each pace and his mouth felt dry and rough, like the dusty cobbles of the street. |
|
There could be a catfight on the cobbles between two of the north west's most feisty females for the right to call themselves mum of the year. |
|
The cobbles are dominated by pink quartzite, red sandstone and vein quartz, with minor granite clasts near the contact and rare green clasts. |
|
Follow the cobbles downhill and through a gate to reach the canal's lower level on the left. |
|
They consist of particulate rocks that vary in size from sand to pebbles and cobbles. |
|
On many beaches, winter storms can remove a layer of sand, exposing cobbles or boulders. |
|
Production designer Simon Elliott and his team built new frontages onto existing buildings and the existing cobbles could be used without alternation. |
|
At many construction sites along the highway, Ku and thousands of workers used cobbles, which are densely packed in gabions, to build firm and solid embankments. |
|
|
The uprush or swash of water carries a highly corrosive load of sand, gravel, and cobbles. |
|
Beneath the cobbles that lay beneath the tarmac it was shaly stone, which had to be pickaxed rather than dug. |
|
Joggers criss-crossed the cobbles on the way to the sandy waterfront, where fishermen mended nets and bikinied beauties drank from coconuts. |
|
For instance, cliffs composed of a large proportion of cobbles and boulders develop a protective frame of the larger clasts around their base. |
|
Boom is a former World Cyclo-cross World Champion and a world class trialist but also has the proven ability to ride on the cobbles. |
|
The material culture essentially consists of bifacial tools shaped by core reduction of large blocks or cobbles. |
|
It's less effective at moving coarser sediments, such as cobbles, but it can do so. |
|
Mist rolls in from the Thames and the clattering of jugs of ale and steaming platters of jellied eels is interrupted only by the noise of wheels on cobbles. |
|
They could do even more, says Ede Ijjasz Vasquez, a bank official, such as paving rural roads with cobbles to prevent them being washed away. |
|
Mudflats are commonly littered with cobbles and boulders that are buried in the sediment or lying on top. |
|
The term granular resources describes a wide range of materials, from silts to sands, gravel and cobbles. |
|
He is skillful and is capable of dealing with the cobbles of Paris-Roubaix and the hills of Southern Limburg and the Ardennes. |
|
Has anyone else nearly crocked their ankle on the newly re-laid cobbles? |
|
Shallow, sustained ripples over cobbles, often with shallow pools, islands and bars. |
|
Marvel at the line-up of shabby kids in a line across the old Syke on Fellside, where smoke billows across the rooftops and cats prowl the cobbles. |
|
When the town was completely out of sight, the chauffeur drove down a road which within only a few miles lost its metalled base and crumbled into rough cobbles. |
|
This development has one building which looks rather like a replica oast house, other houses have interesting cobbles and flint, and all in all each house looks different. |
|
If you stand quietly and let your imagination run away, you can hear the creak of carts, the clop of hooves on the cobbles, and the voices of animals and people. |
|
Although his clothes were clean and cared-for, they were also clearly second-hand and shabby, and his long feet were bare on the cobbles of the street. |
|
If a traveler had been passing through, they would not have noticed that the cobbles in the square were uneven and had long since been denied attention. |
|
|
It is thought that these were later burials using cobbles from the surrounding area. |
|
These tools, of a type called Oldowan, after the gorge, were small cobbles of volcanic stone that had been knapped — shaped into rough cutting or chopping implements by having flakes struck off their edges. |
|
Medium-grade gravels tend to be easier to walk on than smaller grades, rounded pea shingle or large cobbles. |
|
On my first visit to a German Christmas market I knocked back a couple of mugfuls to keep out the cold, toppled over on the icy cobbles and fell flat on my face. |
|
Sediment' describes any geological material that is not solid rock, and includes clay, silt, sand, gravel, cobbles and boulders, or a mixture of these. |
|
Where a path or dune scarp did not exist prior to the hurricane, waves swept up the duneslope flattening and cutting vegetation and depositing cobbles and debris and caused little damage to boardwalks. |
|
On most natural cobbles or nodules of source material, a weathered outer rind called a cortex covers the unweathered inner material. |
|
Large cobbles were probably obtained from nearby, as they did not appear frequently within the subsoil in the excavated area. |
|
The church is of cobbles plus stone dressings, much of it in the perpendicular style. |
|
Large breaking waves throw cobbles up above the limits of the swash, building ridges at the back of the beach that are considerably higher than the high tide level. |
|
The deep water boulders and cobbles are thought to support diverse marine life including sea firs, anemones and sponges. |
|
In the rapids, the substrate is composed of blocks, cobbles and pebbles. |
|
Shot rock is irregular-shaped angular cobbles and boulders blasted from surrounding hillsides. |
|
Areas of freshly deposited small and large gravels and cobbles may be critical for spawning, but it is likely that no single attribute is essential to redd site selection. |
|
View of Martinique Beach near parking lot 2 where waves flooded and trimmed the lower seaward dune built since 1999, deposited cobbles, scoured the old duneline and damaged the access steps. |
|
The landing site is reminiscent of a dry lakebed with rounded cobbles 10-15 cm in diameter, probably made of water ice, lying above a finer-grained substrate that looks like gravel. |
|
Large breaking waves often throw cobbles up above the limits of the swash. |
|
Seaward of the sand bar there is a wave-washed shelf composed of cobbles and sediment, part of which is exposed subaerially at low tides. |
|
Pebbles and cobbles exposed as the beach was cut down were deposited over sand dunes at the top of the beach and formed the foundation for additional dune building as the lower beach was rebuilt. |
|
The largest is a mixture of angular cobbles and boulders deposited as a point bar upstream of the junction with Deer Creek on the north bank. |
|
|
Hornfels also occurs locally, particularly adjacent to the metamorphic zone near Mount Alexina and as cobbles within Hughes Creek. |
|
The local authority has already started to hide the spider's web of wiring that drapes the main streets of the city, widen the pavements, replace the cobbles and lay drains. |
|
Glaciofluvial sediments: Glaciofluvial deposits consist of coarse to medium grained sand and gravel, poorly to well sorted and bedded, with numerous cobbles, boulders, and lenses of till. |
|
This unit, which is composed of coarse sand, gravel and cobbles up to 40 metres thick, forms very permeable aquifers and can be good sources of well water. |
|
Worse, red-shifting companies might decide to emulate Google, an internet company that cobbles its systems together from large numbers of low-cost machines, rather than buying expensive kit from a single vendor. |
|
The mother-and-daughter duo tottered back onto the cobbles like a pair of evil twins, with sarcasm and surliness dripping from every one of their pretty little pores. |
|
He flew through the moonlight streets, clattering over cobbles, darting down narrow alleys and up twisty wynds, racing to his love. |
|
Crossing the bridge and the raki boiler of the village a sign that shows us the right uphill, where we can see tracks from cobbles from the heyday of ancient Lyktos. |
|
Boots stamping, echoing on cobbles as Doors opened, curtains pulled back watching, As their breath steamed, Suits, woollen waistcoats, tweeds, well-worn, With elbows, Frayed. |
|
You could still see some of the cobbles of the jitty mouth, where it had run behind the terrace down on Andrew's Road, but it was pretty much all gone. |
|
Home to the mosaic of coloured-lit windows in the black and white houses, the fake gas lamps ambering the cobbles, sometimes the scent of applewood smoke. |
|
And before Xabi Alonso jetted off for new Madrilenian pastures, locals insist the Spaniard regularly headed for the cobbles of Falkner Street for a post-training coffee. |
|
The surface of the bank partly consists of gravel and larger cobbles. |
|
It is easy to see this pattern when the waves are destructive and wash away finer grained material at the top, revealing coarser sands and cobbles as the base. |
|
Offshore from Blyth is the Trink, a ridge of limestone ridge covered by gravel, cobbles and boulders and which supports rare species such as the sea spider. |
|
The cobbles were added to the excavated subsoil and this was dumped back into the cut to form a stable foundation, which was raised in the centre of the road to form a camber. |
|