We know from isostasy that the crust responds to changing load distributions on its surface by vertical movements. |
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I took the roast fillet of beef in a parsley crust with asparagus polonaise and turnip and turned carrots. |
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The sharp boundary between the crust and mantle is called the Mohorovicic discontinuity or Moho. |
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The Mohorovicic discontinuity, or Moho, the first major boundary of the earth's interior, separates the crust from the underlying mantle. |
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The molten rock rises to the seafloor and cools to form the layer of crust that paves the ocean floor. |
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They suggest that liquid in the Martian crust was heated when the molten rock or magma rose to the surface. |
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As the layers build up, they form a thick crust of turf that is called peat. |
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The succession begins with a conspicuous brown sideritic crust above the last rich cheiloceratid fauna. |
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Conversely, crust above the detachment undergoes nearly isobaric heating accompanied by brittle faulting with little or no uplift. |
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I pour the filling into the unbaked pie crust and gently fold the top pastry over my concoction. |
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Turn berries into an unbaked 8-inch pie crust and dot the top with 2 tablespoons butter. |
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The earth's crust is depleted in iridium and other platinum group elements, while meteorites are enriched in them. |
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With an unceremonious toss, he deposited a black crust of bread and a beaker of stagnant water into the cage. |
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There were also dense slabs of chocolate fondant, and an apple croustade with a light, frilly crust that melted to butter in your mouth. |
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We are both avid crust lovers, but sadly there was a ring of uneaten dough left on each of our otherwise empty plates. |
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The lowlands of the island are blanketed with muskeg, a type of bog up to 3 feet deep with a hard crust on top. |
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The flaky filo crust gave way to sloppy mouthfuls of meat and dark gravy beneath. |
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Very unpractical but at least we managed to keep Tommy happy with pizza crust in the mean time. Next time I'll try McDonalds. |
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Amy set the soon-to-be pizza crust in front of her children, who smeared the pasta sauce from a jar across it. |
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From under the granular crust of a subalpine snowfield sprang forth life as tender and fresh as a butterfly's newly unfolded wings. |
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She taught me how to make the best pie crust ever and often bragged to other people about the beautiful apple pies I could make. |
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They range from the downright common to the ultimate upper crust in Paul's eyes, and with every sketch the audience hugged itself with glee. |
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The best part of it is if you pick off the bubbled, breadcrumbed, cheesy crust off the top of the dish. |
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The seismic section shows upwarped reflectors in the upper crust which may be related to this convergence. |
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Cut the bread crust into four soldiers and then cut each soldier into four bite-sized croutons. |
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The crust and the sandwich buns were all freshly made, light warm and doughy. |
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This young, thick crust is very buoyant and rises above the level of the ocean surface. |
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The meal was a constant struggle with pizza crust that can only be described as vulcanized. |
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They also make the round, thin crust type, as well as calzones stuffed with spinach, ham and cheese. |
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The presence of basalt and obsidian is a sign of volcanic activity and the instability of the earth's crust in this area. |
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The decision to focus on pizza crust production has proven to be a good choice for the co-op. |
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The plates continue to spread apart, the crust cracks again, another eruption of lava occurs, and another dike forms. |
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In frying, a crisp caramelized crust is formed that will allow but a small amount of oil to soak into the food. |
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The strikers are far from the stereotyped image of upper crust BBC presenters. |
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The crust is more prevalent on stones and stony-irons and may have partially flaked off. |
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Warm, moist headspace air can activate mold growth, causing grain to crust and seal over. |
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We agree with Leong that a complex basement composed of both ophiolitic and granitic crust underlies much of Sabah. |
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The continental crust is not stratified like the oceanic crust and so does not have a characteristic seismic velocity structure. |
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The kind where the crust flakes off in sharp little pieces that stick to the roof of our mouth. |
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All the locals were legering dry crust or flake for the roach but I was determined to float fish. |
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The theory of plate tectonics holds that the entire crust of the earth is broken into six large pieces and many smaller ones. |
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In plate tectonics, fragments of crust move independently along the surface of the viscous mantle. |
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Like a miniature version of Earth's plate tectonics, thin slabs of basalt crust jostle about, driven by the heat below. |
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Must we reject the theory of plate tectonics because the movement of the earth's crust cannot be reproduced? |
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The saline crust is well developed on the interfluves between the valleys and shows little or no evidence for active runoff. |
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As the earth's crust was forced upwards, it displaced hundreds of cubic metres of water along an area as large as 1000 km long and 100 km wide. |
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All the bread they use, from pita to the crust of Turkish pizza, is baked fresh in a traditional clay oven. |
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In the conduit where the crust cracked, the magma crystallizes and forms a dike. |
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Soon he learnt to recognise, simply from looking at a dried patch of mud, whether it was worth breaking its crust with his pick. |
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Unlike ridges and trenches, transform faults offset the crust horizontally, without creating or destroying crust. |
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A floating ice shelf is like the crust of the earth floating on the earth's plastic mantle. |
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The next course was a paupiette of N.Z. lemon sole with smoked salmon and potato crust in a saffron-dill sauce. |
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The picking produces excoriations which crust and may heal with hyperpigmentation, hypopigmentation, or scarring. |
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Chlorine occurs abundantly in the Earth's crust and in the Earth's hydrosphere. |
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High geothermal activity and high heat flow at shallow levels in the crust are most likely due to aqueous fluids. |
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If pizza is going to be the kitchen's focus, a better crust is necessary, and the ingredients need to be pared down. |
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Ever-mindful of the swans, the ducks flapped as they fought for pieces of crust that floated, and dived for bits of bread that sunk. |
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Lightly sweetened peaches peek through the top crust in this adorable pandowdy. |
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It appears the next logical step is the Pizza Hut mid-day stuffed crust pizza, or the Taco Bell afternoon chimichanga plate. |
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Organic seared salmon with a sesame crust and a marginally oversweet, faintly citric sauce could have done with some seasoning. |
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Dr.Gupta provided the first geophysical evidence for an enormously thick crust below the Tibet plateau and Himalayan region. |
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The acoustic facies of its substratum has neither the characteristics of the continental crust nor those of the oceanic crust. |
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There are two possible tectonic settings for the deep subduction of Indian Plate continental crust in the early Tertiary. |
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Granitoids are abundant in the Iberian Massif, and result from melting of the continental crust thickened during the Variscan orogeny. |
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In the cold dawns of January and early February in Vermont, a semi-permanent thin white crust is stretched over the frozen ground. |
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This is where the old money lives, where the nouveau riche covet, and where anyone who's anyone among the upper crust loves to gossip about. |
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Formation of mature cryptogamic crust typically requires decades free of disturbance. |
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The and rain and hail came with strong winds which will crust the soil, making emergence of new plants difficult in some fields. |
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Posh chefs would crust the top with a blow torch but I don't trust myself with a blow torch when I've lost count of the wine I've drunk. |
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It must be able to hold sufficient moisture, but should not crust on top as this may prevent oxygen reaching the roots. |
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Instead, he simply he packed a bag and turfed up in France, playing part-time football and earning a crust working in a garage. |
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More than a hundred hotspots beneath the Earth's crust have been active during the past 10 million years. |
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These seismic waves in the crust are what people feel when they experience an earthquake. |
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Slab pull is the theory in which subduction of the earth's crust is thought to pull the plates apart. |
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Below the crust is the mantle, a dense, hot layer of semi-solid rock approximately 2,900 km thick. |
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Earth's crust essentially floats on the denser mantle that behaves as a very viscous fluid. |
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Also during this time, the Earth's crust cooled enough that rocks and continental plates began to form. |
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Applied over time, these stresses cause the rocks of the crust to fold and fracture. |
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The anorthosite rock then cooled to form a solid crust above the hot, liquid mantle. |
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Geochemistry generally concerns the study of the distribution and cycling of elements in the crust of the earth. |
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Sometimes this was encased in a rich crust of pastry or dough similar to saffron bread, a form reminiscent of the Scottish black bun. |
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Baked in the oven under a pastry crust and served hot with boiled potatoes and a green vegetable it's a dish fit for a king. |
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Its pastry crust speaks to a diner of infinite potential, obscuring what's within and defying conventional conceptions of identity. |
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Whether you serve a fruity deep-dish cobbler draped with a homemade pastry crust or a lush pumpkin cheesecake, keep the servings small. |
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For example, terms exist for powdery snow, snow that fell yesterday, and snow that is soft underneath with a hard crust on top. |
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What's under threat here is simply civilization, the thin crust we lay across the seething magma of nature, including human nature. |
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Despite its thin crust of moderate strength, the clay becomes much softer with depth. |
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At first it seems like we are going to make good progress because the top crust of the snow is frozen enough to hold our body weight. |
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It is as if the lava from an erupting volcano had hardened into a crust just before it engulfed the neighborhood. |
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Cementitious products form a crust over the soil surface once they have set. |
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Making a judgement based on his outer crust you might assume he could be facile and lightweight in a clever kind of way. |
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With each step, their hooves press lightly, then break through the icy crust atop the shallow snow. |
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No one shook with more anger than when they glimpsed a rat contentedly gnawing on a slice of carrot or crust of bread. |
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The exterior crust is supposed to be crispy and golden brown, but this one tastes like cardboard. |
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But it's not a roll because bread rolls have a crust and barm cakes are soft. |
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The sandwiches were on white bread and every crust was cut off neatly from the edge. |
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Many people build earth ovens for the crisp bread crust and chewy crumb texture that only high-temperature, retained-heat ovens can provide. |
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Shave the light brown crust from the outside of the French stick with a bread knife and discard it. |
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The crispy crust is well filled, you can really taste the cheese and the onions have been properly fried to sweetness. |
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This process causes the snow to compact as it slowly diminishes creating a solid crust base and surface. |
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The locations in the Earth's crust where these accumulations occur are collectively referred to as orebodies, ore reserves, or ore deposits. |
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Once the load of the upper crust is removed from the lower crust, the balance of forces that act on the plate causes uplift of the high mountain. |
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Unfortunately, some rocks weather into a sort of brown almost burnt crust on the outside, so that can be confusing. |
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The pressure within the crust hadn't increased, as would be expected when molten rock wells up from below. |
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The homemade onion rings are even better, cut thin and lightly battered so there's a nice balance between crust and juicy onion. |
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To start, we were brought plates of micro-thin crust pizza, one with a simple tomato sauce and herbs and the other a white pizza with herbs. |
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This crust helps control odors and should not be disturbed until the waste is agitated, just prior to field spreading. |
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Students with upper crust English accents and preppy shirts air-kiss before descending on Edinburgh's Rick's Bar for cocktails. |
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The cheese she ended up with has a peachy crust and a paste that varies according to ripeness from semi-firm to creamily oozing. |
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Unroll a 10-ounce package of refrigerated pizza crust onto a large baking sheet that has been coated with cooking spray. |
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This crust was to disrupt enemy landings long enough to allow the arrival of local reinforcements. |
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Some celebs were actually earning a crust rather than just living it up and having it large. |
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Here, I have combined it with breadcrumbs and parsley to make a delicious crust for grilled fish such as whiting, lemon sole or sea bream. |
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At the same time, the continental crust tends to ride over the oceanic crust, for it is the lighter of the two. |
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This compression is significantly reduced in the upper crust above the anomalous central region by the superimposed tensional loading stress. |
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Oceanic crust is thus created from the mantle at the crest of the mid-ocean ridge system, a volcanic submarine rise. |
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Frank Knaus found crude 3.1-cm pyrite cubes covered with a crust of limonite. |
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On volcanically active planets like Venus, the surface roils and churns so quickly that solid crust does not have a chance to form. |
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After new oceanic crust forms, the lithosphere cools and thickens as it moves away from the ocean ridge. |
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In the Ebro basin, flexure of the crust was produced mainly by the Pyrenean load, but also by the emergent thrust sheet of the Aragonese Branch. |
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As the inside expands it cracks the outer shell, giving it the appearance of the crust of a loaf of bread. |
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And she switches expertly from the upper crust wife yearning for a bit of rough to the cold company strategist. |
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And I'll have a lager-flavoured pork pie with a raspberry meringue crust while you're at it, Alan. |
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Prior to any volcanic eruption, magma wells up through the earth's crust via any weaknesses in the rock structure. |
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As old oceanic crust was consumed in the trenches, new magma rose and erupted along the spreading ridges to form new crust. |
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Then you are going to have to start jailing the names of the upper crust and lower pond scum masquerading as upper crust. |
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As a dining companion pointed out, the crust can make or break a pizza, and in this case, it broke it. |
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Leanne imagined thin, crispy crust smothered in sweet yet savory tomato sauce, warm cheese, pepperoni, and succulent mushrooms. |
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This causes a scab or crust to form over the wound site, which impedes healing. |
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The blister wall breaks, leaving open sores, which finally crust over to become dry, brown scabs. |
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They are coated in bread crumbs so that, like a schnitzel, a crispy crust encases the meat. |
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Hot new ocean crust forms at midocean ridges, cools, and sinks back into the mantle, shedding heat and driving the plates. |
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When the continental crust stretches beyond its limits, tension cracks begin to appear on the Earth's surface. |
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Manure stored in silo-type storage units may crust on the top, but cracks allow flies to deposit eggs in wet material below the crust. |
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Beneath the oceans, the crust varies little in thickness, generally extending only to about 5 km. |
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The earth's crust varies greatly in thickness, the least beneath the oceans, the most under the continental land masses. |
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To the east was the thin crust of soil that covered the great basaltic flows of the Great Basin. |
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Below the transparent batholith, the crust is very reflective to depths of c.20 km. |
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The lower crust beneath the Dzhabyk batholith is only weakly reflective and the Moho is not imaged. |
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Most deep-sea trenches in the Pacific are floored by normal basaltic oceanic crust overlain by pelagic sediments and ash. |
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Once the crust has set up, the least amount of fresh powder will give you equally enjoyable and fun conditions. |
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The pizza is as you'd expect, with a thick crust and lots of toppings, but we found it surprisingly light and not greasy. |
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The brittle crust cracked and slid in many places, especially along paths called Benioff zones. |
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Their principal outcrops constitute the great Precambrian shields of continental crust upon which later formations were deposited. |
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Because I love to walk around the house barefoot I had a crust of hard skin on my heels and along the side of my big toe. |
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The descending mantle current tends to drag the crust down with it, forming a deep trench or piling up young mountains. |
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The thick portions of crust will attain a higher elevation because of isostasy. |
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This is the only isotope of francium occurring in nature, but at most there is only 20-30 g of the element present in the earth's crust at any one time. |
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Crushed filberts make a great pie crust without any other ingredients. |
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Lines as corny as this can have someone in the audience break into laughter, and the thin crust of magic that keeps the film afloat will fall into splinters. |
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Cover the top of each fillet with a quarter of the andouille crust mixture. |
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All three pastas are clogged by overthick, underseasoned sauces, and the poor li'l rainbow trout can hardly find its way clear of its phyllo crust and vegetable ragout. |
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She noticed, trailing from the corner of the frozen grimace of his mouth, a trickle of mealy yellow liquid that was drying into a crust on his cheek. |
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Most metamorphic petrologists would argue that the anhydrous nature of rocks formed under deep crustal conditions, e.g. granulites, proves the deep crust is dry. |
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The magma contains components of the sediments and weathered oceanic crust from the Nazca plate as well as the peridotite in the mantle beneath South America. |
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I love mine with a crisp crust yet yieldingly chewy on the inside. |
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Think all-tequila margaritas, carne asada tacos spritzed with lemon, key lime pies that are mounds of crust and nothing more. |
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This characteristic of the proposed scheme could make it suitable for less tectonically stable parts of the world provided enclaves of suitably thick crust are available. |
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The Bay Area is renowned for giving birth to jam bands, crust punks, and even thrash metallers, but few truly recognize the region's contributions to rap. |
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Plate tectonics and tectonophysics are disciplines of Earth Science which describe the motions of the Earth's crust and the associated driving mechanisms of such motion. |
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The slab of crust containing the deposit and its assemblage of vent fossils was then translated northeastwards on the Farallon Plate and accreted to its present location. |
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After the crust moves off the hot spot, the volcanic activity stops. |
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Ground speed with a rotary hoe should usually be between 8 and 12 mph, and the hoe tips should penetrate deep enough to go through any crust that has formed. |
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Once extension of the adjacent crust ceases, fluid penetration through the crust is hindered and active serpentinization beneath the continental crust ceases. |
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The crust is crispy with a marked chocolate taste, the pears are sweet and refreshing, and the ganache connects it all with its creamy chocolaty goodness. |
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Scotland lies on ancient continental crust known as the Hebridean craton. |
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She asks, and for the first time, I look at her, really look at her, the line of her blond pageboy haircut, the crust of lipstick around her mouth. |
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A good fillet of sea bream was rather overwhelmed by a quilt of very salty black olive paste and the grilled eel in a herb crust was also a little heavy-handed. |
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Their tender flesh was contrasted with the punchy crushed-peppercorn crust and well-matched with a light citrus sauce and the exquisitely sliced and grilled zucchini. |
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The rising sea level will only be partly offset by geological changes in the crust of the earth, which are pushing up parts of the island's land mass. |
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The end was an underground chamber situated in a place in the earth's crust where geo-thermal energy will generate sufficient energy to keep me super-cooled. |
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Sounding like a dish right out of Bennigan's, puffed-rice-crusted fluke is an unexpected rush, the crust lending the fish the nutty appeal of the meatier pompano. |
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The margherita pizza with fresh tomato, garlic, basil and mozzarella, crisp crust and interplay of sweet and acid, was reminiscent of the fabled tomato pies of Trenton. |
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The earthquake resulted when Earth's crust readjusted to the pressure. |
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I sweetened the crust with a combination of stevia and apple butter. |
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Late in the dry season of central Africa, blooms of red algae grow in expansive mats over a white crust of sodium carbonate on Tanzania's Lake Natron. |
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The hills were formed by some upthrusting of the earth's crust which changed the landscape dramatically after the weight of the ice was melted away. |
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I snapped the hard outer crust and observed a softer kernel consisting of unidentifiable mush with what looked like carrots and bean skins protruding from it. |
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A thin crust of coral is rooted in the sea bed by a fixture of limestone. |
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I am not an expert on desserts, but the outer crust on the fairly ordinary orange ice cream interior didn't work for me at all, nor did the bitter chocolate sauce. |
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The potato was badly discoloured and the pastry crust was decidedly soggy. |
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It has French ingredients like leeks and tarragon, and I use puff pastry to make the crust easy! |
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In different times and places, the distinctive yellow-orange color of the classic patty crust has come from palm oil, annatto seeds, yellow food coloring and turmeric. |
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The Moon's crust is composed of a material known as regolith. |
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Colouring and flavouring surface baits such as pellets chum mixer and crust can further improve takes, but often species such as carp will bump and knock such baits. |
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The crust was stuffed with cheese and pepperoni, Italian sausage, and bacon. |
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The crust on the original pies, which often were sent to London as Christmas gifts, had to be strong enough to survive the bumpy carriage journey. |
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Most commercial marble formed more than 230 million years ago, when heat and pressure within Earth's crust rearranged the molecules in limestone, forcing it to recrystallize. |
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The rocks found in the crust of the continents is called sial. |
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If the magma has risen quickly from the source region of the volcano, the xenoliths may represent country rock from all levels of the crust through which it has travelled. |
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It can be slow to heal, can crust up and can scab for many weeks. |
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The cheese used on top to form the crust would have to contain the greatest amount of fat in the dish, so I reserved half of the low-fat cheese to use there. |
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Our kids, who are not big pizza fans, loved the Hawaiian, partially because it was made with back bacon as opposed to ham, and partially because the crust wasn't overcooked. |
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The infinite and inexorable movement of the earth's crust is calculably liable to shift the nuclear waste, when it will disperse in aquifers or on the surface. |
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These gneiss complexes contain Caledonian eclogites that attest to the deep burial of these rocks in the over-thickened crust resulting from the Caledonian orogeny. |
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Also has handy circles marked to make it easy to roll out your crust to the right size. |
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Brackish and ocean waters may contain large quantities of sodium chloride as well as many other soluble compounds leached from the crust of the earth. |
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It's just there's a distinction between earning a crust by playing what is ostensibly a game and picking up a salary in the black art of sell, sell, sell. |
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It was a pleasure to try the legendary stargazy pie, with the sardine heads peeking up through the golden puff-pastry crust of a ripe, creamy white-fish pie. |
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Their Long Sunday Afternoon duet epitomises what they mean to each other, while the upper crust Eddie is the perfect foil for Mickey's side-splitting mannerisms and send ups. |
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And what if the crust were not a dense pastry, but a light cream cheese crust? |
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The Independent reports this has led to some residents giving up the teleworking dream and earning a crust by hand-painting Christmas cards or teaching yoga. |
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The phosphatized sediment crust was then broken into small fragments by heavy current activity and then redeposited and mixed in with adjacent lime muds. |
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The lure of the three frigid Galilean moons is that beneath their thick crust of ice may lie vast reservoirs of liquid water that harbor, or once harbored, life. |
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The sial and sima both form the earth's crust which varies in thickness. |
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This chicken features a thin, abundant crust with so many facets and angles you want to call it rococo. |
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Oxygen is the most abundant element in the crust of the Earth. |
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I had visions of running over to the fresh bread counter, ripping the crust off a large bloomer and burying my face in the soft, warm expanse of white loaf. |
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And the desserts are an oddly dismal lot, from an apple pie in which the fruit is stiff, the crust sodden, to a stodgy strawberry shortcake on hard, stale biscuits. |
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Alternatively, place ingredients on unbaked crust and bake until done. |
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So, if there was an early origin of life on the earth one expects that anything which was living in the upper layers of the crust to have been essentially sterilised. |
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Free up the crust with a spatula, and breaking it into smaller pieces, place and serve on separate serving dish. |
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I also love the slight crust that they develop during the last stage of cooking, and the contrast between the tender flesh and the slightly wrinkled skin. |
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Blanketing a heartwarming stew with a flaky brown crust is a great idea. |
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We started with tremendous sourdough bread whose moist grey crumb, chewy crust and deep sustaining flavour would certainly attract compliments and loyalty even in France. |
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Even in fairly recent history the theory of tectonic plates beneath the earth's crust was discounted and scorned before it could eventually be proven. |
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You may already be familiar with its crispy crust pastry and mildly spiced creamy filling but now you can prepare this tasty French delicacy in your own kitchen. |
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I love her lattice crust variation, and the addition of nutmeg sauce takes it to a whole other level. |
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Here the Papua New Guinea continental crust appears to be underthrusting the adjacent marginal basin and obduction of the ophiolite is occurring in an uphill direction. |
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Hess's hypothesis on the serpentinite composition of the lower oceanic crust was confirmed by serpentinite and gabbroid fragments dredged from some fracture zones. |
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For baking French sticks or loaves, an optional steam generator can provide sufficient steam as the French sticks are being loaded to produce the necessary crust formation. |
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There is a relatively thin crust of ice, but most of the water is liquid. |
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Intrusive rock forms within Earth's crust from the crystallization of magma. |
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Large bodies of magma that solidify underground before they reach the surface of the crust are called plutons. |
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Thus the continental crust is normally much thicker under mountains, compared to lower lying areas. |
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These areas often occur when the regional stress is extensional and the crust is thinned. |
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An ocean beneath the moon's icy crust is highly alkaline, similar to Earth's soda lakes, scientists say. |
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I judged from your remark about the diligence and industry of the high Parisian upper crust that it would have some point. |
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Cover crust with parchment paper and pour in baking beans or weights. |
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The extra crunchy crust of our Pubstyle Battered Cod locks in moistness during frying for super tender, flakier fish. |
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Arsenic is a widely distributed semimetallic element that occurs naturally in various compounds in the crust of the earth. |
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The subjacent Bryantsville Breccia has subaerial laminar crust enclosing micrite tidal clasts. |
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There have been no reports on any considerable crust tremors in the Kamchatkan towns or villages. |
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A juicy tender Canadian bacon that looks a bit like a meat loaf is coated on the outside by a crust of cooked and crushed peas. |
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In its most speeded-up form, bake-off bread might need only a few minutes in the oven to give it a crust and some colour. |
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I'm becroggled. I've never made a pie crust with anything other than butter. |
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Their substitutes featured two players from League One clubs and Miller, who earns his crust these days with Vancouver Whitecaps. |
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With crumbly dirt crust and a few pink worms peeking out, the pie looked totally gagworthy! |
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Certainly all that crust and crud on his painting was exciting. |
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At the end of this period, the Earth's crust sank here which led to the area being covered by sea, depositing a variety of new rocks. |
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Hot water crust pastry, puff pastry, and shortcrust pastry are among the pastry crusts prepared for steak and kidney pie. |
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It consists of roughly chopped pork and pork jelly sealed in a hot water crust pastry. |
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Occasionally the top crust is dispensed with altogether in favour of a layer of cranberries sealed into place with aspic jelly. |
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Blue Stilton's distinctive blue veins are created by piercing the crust of the cheese with stainless steel needles, allowing air into the core. |
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The basis of Dutch apple pie is a crust on the bottom and around the edges. |
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This crust is then filled with pieces or slices of apple, usually a crisp and mildly tart variety such as Goudreinet or Elstar. |
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Instead of it being right side up with crust on top and bottom, it actually is upside down, with the fruit being caramelized. |
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The mid-ocean ridges are where new crust is added to the earth, so MORB is the basic building material of our world. |
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Beneath the surface, two plates of the Earth's crust were slowly colliding, forcing the Cocos Plate to slide under the Caribbean Plate. |
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These also confirm the linkage between ice ages and continental crust phenomena such as glacial moraines, drumlins, and glacial erratics. |
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The weight of the ice sheets was so great that they deformed the Earth's crust and mantle. |
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Temperatures can also exceed the solidus of a crustal rock in continental crust thickened by compression at a plate boundary. |
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On Earth, rifts can occur at all elevations, from the sea floor to plateaus and mountain ranges in continental crust or in oceanic crust. |
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Large masses, such as ice sheets or glaciers, can depress the crust of the Earth into the mantle. |
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After the ice sheet or glacier melts, the mantle begins to flow back to its original position, pushing the crust back up. |
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Juicy tender Canadian bacon that looks a bit like meat loaf is coated on the outside by a crust of cooked and crushed peas. |
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Zinc is the 24th most abundant element in Earth's crust and has five stable isotopes. |
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Chalcophiles formed as the crust solidified under the reducing conditions of the early Earth's atmosphere. |
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When that crust is nubbly and evenly browned, and the chicken meat is cooked through, the chicken is sublime. |
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The oldest Pacific Ocean floor is only around 180 Ma old, with older crust subducted by now. |
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The decay of the radionuclides in rocks of the Earth's mantle and crust contribute significantly to Earth's internal heat budget. |
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In geology, a graben is a depressed block of the Earth's crust bordered by parallel faults. |
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The massif is a smaller structural unit of the crust than a tectonic plate and is considered the fourth largest driving force in geomorphology. |
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Earth's volcanoes occur because its crust is broken into 17 major, rigid tectonic plates that float on a hotter, softer layer in its mantle. |
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A rift is a region where the lithosphere extends as two parts of the Earth's crust pull apart. |
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Often a rift will form in an area of the crust that is already weakened by earlier geological activity. |
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An extensional fault may be seen as a crack in the crust that extends down at an angle to the vertical. |
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Warm mantle material wells up, melting the crust and often causing volcanoes to emerge in the rift basin. |
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Geologically the continents largely correspond to areas of continental crust that are found on the continental plates. |
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However some areas of continental crust are regions covered with water not usually included in the list of continents. |
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Some areas of continental crust are largely covered by the sea and may be considered submerged continents. |
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Some islands lie on sections of continental crust that have rifted and drifted apart from a main continental landmass. |
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There are many microcontinents, or continental fragments, that are built of continental crust but do not contain a craton. |
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The islands rise from Jurassic oceanic crust associated with the opening of the Atlantic. |
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Oceanic crust is also part of tectonic plates, but it is denser than continental lithosphere, so it floats low on the mantle. |
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As the ice melted, rebound of the crust lagged behind, producing a regional slope toward the ice. |
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During rifting, as the crust is thinned, the Earth's surface subsides and the Moho becomes correspondingly raised. |
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Crustal thickening has an upward component of motion and often occurs when continental crust is thrust onto continental crust. |
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In the second stage it subducted under the continental crust of the Karelian plate. |
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The initial uplift following deglaciation was almost immediate due to the elastic response of the crust as the ice load was removed. |
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In this area, many subplates or crust blocks have been recognized, which form the Central Asian and the East Asian transit zones. |
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As explained above, tectonic plates may include continental crust or oceanic crust, and most plates contain both. |
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The distinction between oceanic crust and continental crust is based on their modes of formation. |
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Oceanic crust is also denser than continental crust owing to their different compositions. |
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They also found that the oceanic crust was much thinner than continental crust. |
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A profound consequence of seafloor spreading is that new crust was, and still is, being continually created along the oceanic ridges. |
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The Earth's crust is soaked with water, and water plays an important role in the development of shear zones. |
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Magma from the mantle or lower crust rises through its crust towards the surface. |
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Instead, the cooled and solidified igneous mass crystallises within the crust to form an igneous intrusion. |
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Volcanism is not confined only to Earth, but is thought to be found on any body having a solid crust and fluid mantle. |
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Laxfordian reworking is extensive and very little unmodified Scourian crust has survived. |
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Sedimentary rocks are only a thin veneer over a crust consisting mainly of igneous and metamorphic rocks. |
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A crust formed when the molten outer layer of Earth cooled to form a solid. |
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Peach Melba Tartlets serve up as a symphony of fruity peach yogurt and light cream on a short crust pastry base decorated with peach slices. |
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As the tectonic plates migrate, oceanic crust is subducted under the leading edges of the plates at convergent boundaries. |
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The combination of these processes recycles the oceanic crust back into the mantle. |
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The continental crust consists of lower density material such as the igneous rocks granite and andesite. |
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It consisted of a widespread extension of the Earth's crust that rifted and separated the continents mentioned above. |
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Second, as rifting progressed through Early and Middle Jurassic time, continental crust was stretched and thinned. |
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The buoyant melt rises as magma at a linear weakness in the oceanic crust, and emerges as lava, creating new crust upon cooling. |
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