Together, we could have seriously eroded New Labour's hegemony on the left vote. |
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Its political culture, once fiercely democratic, is being eroded by a manipulated, bureaucratic legalism that identifies dissent as disloyalty. |
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Unless the damaged areas are quickly revegetated, the eroded soils sink below sea level and the area becomes open water. |
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This broad consensus about the rightness of the war was not fundamentally eroded over the next four terrible years. |
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Confidence is steadily being eroded that the police know what they are doing and that they are ready and willing to level with the public. |
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Although that culture eroded away over the generations, it did so at different rates in different places and among different people. |
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I used to have immense pride and respect for England but since 1946 that has almost eroded away. |
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It also eroded away in the South, with the spread of education among whites and blacks. |
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Upon arrival everything was going right, all my worries slowly eroded away. |
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Every wall I had constructed to keep myself from hurting deeply, from being vulnerable, eroded away into nothingness, leaving me alone and frail. |
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Mr Porter added that it was possible to see through the wall in places because so much stonework had eroded away. |
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Soil eroded from newly developed housing sites and washed into the estuary to accumulate there without benefit of filtering by impacted wetlands. |
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Eventually the surrounding layers of older rock eroded away, leaving this mass exposed as a monadnock. |
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The trees have all been cut down on the hills here, and the soil has eroded, leaving chalk exposed. |
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Now I can make out the huge blocks of stone naturally eroded into these surprisingly regular shapes. |
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But 1,000 feet of sandy beach have since eroded away, including all 210 feet that spanned the length of Sunset Cove. |
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The west wall is preserved only in the southwest corner, while a large part of the floor along the western side has eroded away. |
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Steep, rough and eroded by the wind, it imposes a hard vertical dance on a climber. |
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The limestone takes millions of years to form and thousands more being eroded by water to give it the unusual worn appearance. |
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Layered deposits have been partly eroded by the wind in some places, exposing an etched surface. |
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The walls here are cut by centuries of flood and fabulously eroded by wind and storm. |
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Over time, the wind has eroded the landscape and converted the slate rocks into small fragments. |
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The lining epithelium was often eroded, and the underlying stroma showed dense infiltration by inflammatory cells. |
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Seamounts whose peaks have eroded and become a flat surface are called guyots. |
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The axis was revolving to show gorse gullies, rocky gulches and biscuit-coloured eroded clay crusts. |
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If e-crime continues its rise, consumer confidence will be eroded, possibly leading to popular abandonment of the internet and e-commerce. |
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Staff are demoralised, not least because local councils have eroded library opening hours and consequently cut shift allowances. |
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Traditional class boundaries have been eroded and deference has all but disappeared from British society. |
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That majority has eroded to a handful of seats over the past three years after several allies defected to the opposition. |
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Currently, a number of court and legal proceedings have further eroded the pro-choice movement. |
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Society has allowed a lowering of standards and eroded the rules of decent, thoughtful behaviour. |
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The 1940s workmen used cement mixed with granite fragments to replace crumbling medieval mortar, but that mixture has quickly eroded. |
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There were eroded frescoes on the walls, and gleams of marble from corners where the weather had not penetrated. |
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However, the existence of the income tax allowed for a slow creep that eroded the American resistance to income taxation. |
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The cost of living would rise and people's standard of living would be eroded. |
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He said the beams that hold the lantern itself rest on corbels which have also been substantially eroded over time. |
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Eventually, the sandstone slowly eroded away and the hard, erosion-resistant concretions were left on the ground. |
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The green canopy of Kochi is getting eroded as the city is fast turning into a concrete jungle. |
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The rockfaces rose around us like cathedral walls, with pinnacles like finials and buttresses that protruded as chunks had eroded underneath. |
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The value of citizenship is eroded in the enthusiasm of these outfits to inflame communal passions to win adherents to the extremist cult. |
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Our cost competitiveness in the middle of the chain has been seriously eroded. |
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Still, the lack of a pickup in buying has eroded profits and forced the computer makers to eliminate thousands of jobs this year. |
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The innate goodness of an improvable humanity, like the oversight of a benign deity, eroded along with faith in democratic institutions. |
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The eroded surfaces are now masked as damp woods which have invaded impluvia, gorges and escarpments. |
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If, however, the business is failing and the asset base is being gradually eroded, an early decision may leave some capital for reinvestment. |
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That done they then had to patiently read almost illegible writing which had eroded over the decades and centuries. |
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She was sure they had once been clean-cut, but frequent wear gradually eroded away the edges. |
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It has forced compromises on freedoms and eroded civil liberties in many ways. |
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Again, thanks to circumstances beyond our control, our competitiveness has been eroded. |
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This tale of two nightclub hostesses unfolds in a deracinated Britain where moral certainties are being eroded by affluence. |
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Above the fountain, one can see an eroded relief of a seated girl and a boy standing with a hoop and rod. |
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Under the harsh exposure of winter, the population eroded each year as many cheechakos packed up and returned south. |
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On both counts, principles which should be central to any liberal democracy have become dangerously eroded. |
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Bretz presented a paper suggesting that the Channeled Scablands in eastern Washington were eroded catastrophically. |
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From here tackle the eroded path which climbs the steep slopes just east of Ben Vrackie's SW crags. |
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The traditional community right over water is purposefully being eroded by those who would make capital out of this scarce natural resource. |
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Block 18 is of whiter material, probably a sandstone, badly eroded, and contains the remains of an octofoil, with hollow center. |
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The government's capacity to respond to crises has been severely eroded, a fact that has emerged starkly in recent days. |
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Through time, as the quartz is eroded away, the gold is concentrated as nuggets and dust in streams and erosional plains. |
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As much as 1.3 km of sediment were eroded on the footwall blocks of normal faults at that time. |
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They were deposited by a hydrothermal vein cutting granite, which was later eroded exposing surface ore. |
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The eroded head of a figure on a tombstone suggests the vanity of attempts to stem the ravages of time. |
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The world is frightened, economies are dented, and war has eroded global solidarity. |
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There is a wide range of topics which include saline, sodic, acidic, eroded, compacted, and organic soils. |
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But when minivans became tagged as the unstylish choice of soccer moms, sales eroded to about 1.1 million a year. |
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In sum, the institutions were historically narrow in scope and have eroded further because of state interventions. |
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His thinking was certainly influenced by his environment as our values are gradually and unperceptively eroded by our contact with our society. |
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The unmaintained trail down to the sand is steep and a little eroded, but once down you will probably be the only one on the sand. |
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Because the payments from bonds are fixed in advance, their value is quickly eroded by inflation. |
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Many more jobs are being quietly eroded in the small firms that supply multinationals. |
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Locally, linear grooves have been delicately eroded to form small meanders with undercut walls. |
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Known as the Kennewick Man, the skeleton was found in 1996 by spectators at a boat race after the remains eroded from an embankment. |
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In general, mountainous regions with their steep slopes and deep valleys are eroded fastest. |
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The slag was looking rusty, and where some of it had been eroded there has appeared a large blob of tar, it was melting and bubbling in the sun. |
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A moribund economy and the decline of traditionally unionized industries eroded the base of the labor movement. |
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Experts from Germany are investigating the use of a chemical to stabilise the stone monoliths, which have become severely eroded. |
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Since we all stand to lose if the rich biological capital of the tropics is eroded, this is our problem too. |
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These ranged from missing safety clips that hold the rail in place, missing bolts, cracked sleepers and eroded ballast as well as worn out rails. |
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Gradually the distinctions between felonies and misdemeanours were eroded by legislation. |
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In the middle phase, cooperators form traveling waves that are eroded on one side by new defectors and built up on the other by converted loners. |
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The structural discontinuity between the shield and the horizontal lavas filling the embayment corresponds to the eroded scarps of the landslide. |
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He's lived through his 29 years with just his milk teeth, which have slowly eroded to leave him with a less-than-pleasant smile. |
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It has militarized our economy, undermined our own liberties and eroded our democratic rights. |
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In most of the landscape, these form areas of relatively featureless topography as they are easily eroded. |
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It is characterized by large sand seas, eroded mountain ranges, and upland mesas. |
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The posterior clinoids and the floor of the sella were eroded, and the suprasellar portion had a rim of calcification. |
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Our professional mastery of aerospace power, our knowledge and doctrine create an advantage that is not easily eroded. |
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These have become eroded in places, truncating the reflectors and producing scour around obstructions. |
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In fact, one of the roots of my concern is that nobody will know for sure when the safety margin has been eroded too far. |
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The fronds of dabberlocks are often eroded by the savage battering they take from storms. |
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Even cash deposited in high-interest savings accounts for too long will soon have its value eroded by inflation. |
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Frontal assaults were always attempted as a last resort, but they were costly, and their failures eroded political resolve back home. |
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Over the centuries, the fine straight lines and margins of some of the ashlars have eroded away. |
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Without a doubt, the loonie's sharp appreciation has somewhat eroded the competitiveness of Canada's export sector. |
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The names on the eroded headstones were all but illegible, so in the waning light the artist made rubbings of the markers. |
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The age-old distinction between day and night eroded, especially during the 1940s, when wartime needs necessitated round-the-clock production. |
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The probe sent back pictures of rounded rocks, which are most likely ice blocks with their hard edges eroded by flowing rivers of methane. |
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Notice the maker's mark is missing and that the lion passant mark is eroded in a peculiar fashion not consistent with normal wear. |
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Bannisters have been stripped and eroded by the rain and Elaine's door has been penetrated by dry rot. |
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Our salaries and recognition of our professional skills and experience have been eroded over many years. |
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The deliberate sectarian gerrymander that the Northern state was in the first instance has now disappeared, eroded by demographics. |
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Four Army helicopters have lifted around 400 giant bags of stone up the Lake District fells to help in the repair of popular eroded paths. |
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In the six years since Labour came to power we have seen our public services and welfare system eroded almost into extinction. |
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There is nothing whatsoever in the treaty that says that social structures, mana, and rangatiratanga will not be eroded. |
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It said increases in costs of raw materials has eroded its profit margins and yet it still has to stay competitive. |
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I lay still, listening with a numb feeling as my small island of stability eroded away from beneath me. |
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The publication of French dictionaries and lexicons by Enlightenment scholars further eroded regionalisms. |
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High wages and rigid labor rules have hurt productivity, eroded earnings, and made companies reluctant to hire. |
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The wall became so badly eroded that the town council was forced to plant a screen of laurel bushes to hide it. |
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Here there is still a major task of rescue archaeology to be done, because the site is being rapidly eroded. |
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Within rapidly changing lineages, the signal may be best at lower levels, with anciently shared arrangements being eroded. |
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The overlying thrombus had eroded and perforated the posterior mitral valve leaflet. |
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That dominance is being eroded as complementary medicine therapists use public pressure to remould outdated power structures into more pluralistic power sharing. |
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Ngar said authorities in the past introduced pioneer species such as acacias and eucalypts that adapted quickly to badly eroded areas on barren land. |
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Convergence became the watchword as boundaries separating local and long-distance, voice and data, cable and telephone, and wireline and wireless services eroded. |
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Most dens or attempted dens are in peat banks beneath krummholz spruce and occasionally in peat banks without any trees, or in inorganic sediments along eroded river banks. |
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The job, located in an established, upscale residential development, required reshaping 150 ft of the eroded banks of a creek and armoring the site with riprap. |
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The town owes its unusual geography to the Rio Trejo, which eroded the gorge that the town is built in. |
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With the EU expanding the real concern is that existing farmers will see their supports further eroded as new member states get a slice of the pie. |
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Shoshonite nearest the contact with the overlying flow is scoriaceous and, being less weather resistant, has eroded back to form a conspicuous bench. |
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Lower Bathonian sediments were either never deposited or were eroded away. |
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At one time the world was divided into entities that were separated by geographical boundaries, which have been significantly eroded and continue to dissolve. |
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Also mixed in the melange are sandy limestone and serpentine, as well as sediments that eroded off a precursor of our present Sierra Nevada Range. |
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Edmund Burke, on the other hand, christened modern Toryism with his assertion that society was based on a set of values and principals which should not be eroded. |
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Theo murmured that these were animal tracks that we were following, not human, but I pushed on until we turned a corner and met a curved lip of eroded rock. |
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Continued erosion by fast-flowing water eroded the uplands to the north of the Gippsland Basin and covered the coal measures with sands and gravels. |
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These authors speculated that blow wells had eroded, rotated and mineralized the coal balls through a hydrological connection through the seam floor to the sea. |
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During the brief 1991-98 period of peace, Eritreans organized themselves to terrace the steeply eroded mountainsides with endless ribbons of rock. |
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Numerous policy changes have also eroded the division between combat and noncombat positions. |
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Well, apart from the torture victims, the murdered and other unfortunates who have had their civil liberties eroded, human rights curtailed and so on. |
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Since being exposed through the earth's upheavals on the top of a mountain in Antarctica, the rest of the fish's body had now unfortunately been eroded away. |
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Public monuments from Brazil to Berlin have been eroded by pee. |
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Now there were sharp ravines and barren gray slopes and narrow red spires looming above a clay basin that had, for 600 millennia, been eroded by rivers and wind. |
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Geologically, this was a deep valley eroded by the Mississippi during the Pleistocene Era when the sea level was 200 feet below its present stand. |
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Nothing surrounded us but the dark embrace of trees, except where the predawn light touched the eroded stone face of another pyramid rising above the canopy. |
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With traditional office hours being eroded by the 24-hour society, more and more people seem to find themselves caught up in a rat race to get things done fast, and first. |
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Metaphorically, the mass is supposed to have been eroded by time and weather, so revealing its strata, and allowing openings to be created for access and light. |
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Rampant destruction of mountain slopes has eroded soil in water catchment areas, a problem exacerbated by the fast-flowing, short rivers that make collection difficult. |
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In the open, in front of this unlikely holy of holies, are a few rows of hard wooden benches, from which time has long since eroded the protection of varnish. |
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Fuel prices that surged to records have also eroded profitability. |
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This is substantiated by the presence of eroded Permian carbonate clasts. |
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The tremendous velocity of the particle-laden dust stream coupled with high temperatures coming off the clinker cooler rapidly eroded the elbow and standard-issue duct system. |
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Parents and children do not fully understand the privacy and civil rights issues that are being eroded by this back door introduction of teenage identity cards. |
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Hence the cracks probably developed following glacial retreat when the area containing the eroded surface of Bedford Sandstone was in a periglacial setting. |
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Water that runs over the ground carries with it eroded soil, decaying vegetation, living microorganisms, dissolved salts, and colloidal and suspended matter. |
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The storm got sand in the engine intakes and eroded the fuel relays. |
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For Smith, then, nature becomes internal to capitalism in such a way that the very distinction implied by using these terms is eroded and undermined. |
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Parked cars and billboards have further eroded the plaza's space. |
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Although modern, urban spaces were pliable enough to reflect historical changes, their concrete nature suggested that gender differences could not be eroded easily. |
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As the medial side of the cuboid and the lateral side of the ectocuneiform are eroded, the fit between the two specimens cannot be fully assessed. |
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That human impact, along with the climatic forces of wind and water has gullied, eroded and damaged plant ecosystems over a large area of the hill. |
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With the overturning of existing criminal law restrictions, however, the basis for the presumption that abortions were done for health-related reasons has been eroded. |
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The inner edge also tends to be masked by eroded seacliff debris. |
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The bulk of the Mozambique belt of eastern Africa and Madacascar is underlain by deeply eroded and multiply deformed high-grade Proterozoic and Archaean rocks. |
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The picture he draws is not one of corporations denationalized by economic integration and states whose powers have been eroded, as in much current writing on globalization. |
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The union was derecognised a decade ago and we have seen our pay eroded over that time as most of us have had annual rises imposed that fell below inflation. |
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This water eroded the natural limestone of the island into a series of natural caves that became gradually drowned as the ice-sheets melted and the sea level rose. |
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Recent rains likely eroded the topsoil away to a level below the crown. |
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Wind, sand and time have eroded the rock in the strangest of ways. |
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The water slowly eroded the pile of blue, liquid into the silver drain. |
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However, the topography of the hills in the area indicates that before Quaternary erosion a blanket of easily eroded rocks covered most of the peninsula. |
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It is a plain three-part button that was produced from a low-grade brass or copper base with the addition of silver plating, much of which has eroded away. |
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High on the side of the valley is a band of hard stone, below which softer rock has eroded out leaving overhangs and rock shelters along the base of the cliff. |
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Both bays are part of a massive volcano crater that has eroded away. |
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We shall not forget them, nor this magnificent production of a play that reminds us in our selfish age how collective responsibility and camaraderie have eroded away. |
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Perhaps his story is a reminder that life is fickle, and what we have today, can be slowly, or suddenly, eroded away, depending upon our choices, and the events of life. |
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I blinked at him as another fundamental bit of my worldview eroded away. |
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One's standing to resist anything is thus eroded, and even destroyed. |
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However the following summer it was clear that the area downslope of the weir had been eroded and an engineer's report confirmed that work was necessary. |
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The basin will become deeper as it continues to be eroded by ice segregation and abrasion. |
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It is possible that Alum Bay was once fed by a Chine by this name, which has long since eroded away. |
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Examples of heavily eroded mountain ranges include the Timanides of Northern Russia. |
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It sat by mutely while Jack Abramoff, the superlobbyist, spun schemes that eroded public trust, until prosecutors had to move in. |
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A partial anterior septectomy was performed and extended superiorly to the interfrontal sinus septum that had been eroded by tumor. |
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The rock above the Millstone Grit layer has been eroded away, which explains the comparative flatness of the summit. |
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An anticline that has been more deeply eroded in the center is called a breached or scalped anticline. |
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But the constant shapeshifting in response to focus groups eventually eroded the party's sense of itself. |
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In the High Weald Gills are deeply cut ravines, usually with a stream in the base which historically eroded the ravine. |
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The material consolidated and eroded during later exposure above the ocean surface. |
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Dunes move downstream as the upstream slope is eroded and the sediment deposited on the downstream or lee slope in typical bedform construction. |
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The Act has long discriminated against women and eroded cultural values and practices within the Mi'kmaq nation. |
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The eroded bones, identified by CT, were the cortical mastoid, tegmen, posterior ear canal, and middle ear ossicles. |
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Loss of total phosphorus, for instance, in the finer eroded fraction is greater relative to the whole soil. |
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A series of steps rise up from Ore Gap whilst the approach from Esk Hause is rough and eroded. |
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These were deposited in water, probably in a caldera lake, as the volcanic rocks weathered and were eroded. |
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After the Upper Rhine valley had been eroded, most waters from the Alps changed their direction and began feeding the Rhine. |
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Role of continuous wheat and amendments in ameliorating an artificially eroded dark brown chernozemic soil under dryland conditions. |
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The river, which runs below the castle on the east side, has eroded the rock the castle stands on, forming a cliff. |
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The high ground became gradually eroded and to the south the land subsided. |
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Like the other Lake District lakes, Bassenthwaite Lake lies in a glacially eroded valley, left after the last glaciation. |
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The uplifted areas were then eroded, and further sediments, such as the London Clay, were deposited over southern England. |
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In later years, conflicts between the nonaligned nations eroded the solidarity expressed at Bandung, and NAM became ineffective. |
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As a result, safety margins for radioactive materials inside the Windscale reactor were eroded. |
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However, in both the European union and the United States, the need to prevent discrimination has eroded the full extent of freedom of contract. |
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This rock can be weathered and eroded, then redeposited and lithified into a sedimentary rock. |
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As the water that rises from the ablation zone moves away from the glacier, it carries fine eroded sediments with it. |
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Attempts by the szlachta to turn the Zaporozhian Cossacks into peasants eroded the Cossacks' formerly strong loyalty towards the Commonwealth. |
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Intensive weathering has produced vast areas of eroded stone on the mountain slopes and summits of the northern areas. |
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The deeply eroded old riverbed beyond the current shoreline, Hudson Canyon, is a rich fishing area. |
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The Upstate region contains the roots of an ancient, eroded mountain chain. |
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Also, eroded spots were evident where the male claspers attached to the opisthosoma during spawning. |
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They secrete collagen fibres on to the newly eroded bone surface, forming a protein matrix called osteoid. |
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Sections of the flood basalts have been eroded away, but still form a basaltic mountain range known as North Mountain. |
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The spine that forms the divide is the highly eroded arch of an uplift from the sea bottom, in which peaks were formed by volcanic intrusions. |
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The fishing crisis of the 1990s saw the already precarious economic base of the many towns further eroded. |
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This freedom was eventually eroded by the increase in power of feudal lords and the manorial system. |
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Glacial meltwaters eroded a complex of sinuous channels along this margin of the Peak District during this period. |
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The rates at which such processes act control how fast a surface is eroded. |
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Locals blame councillors of years past for allowing groynes to be removed, which resulted in sand being eroded. |
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The harbour lies on a band of weak gravel and clay which is easily eroded by the rivers and sea. |
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Coastal limestones are often eroded by organisms which bore into the rock by various means. |
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As the Solent valley flooded and the island eroded, the river received less water flow and more sediment, causing it to become more tidal. |
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As the granite erodes further, blocks of eroded granite known as clitter are left. |
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They determined that skull and foot bone showed no signs of leprosy, such as an eroded nasal spine and a pencilling of the foot bone. |
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Over time the slate and sandstone rocks covering the granite were eroded exposing the granite in areas such as Dartmoor and Bodmin Moor. |
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The water transported the eroded deposits north and south along the outer Cape's shoreline through a process known as longshore drift. |
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But critics say the elderly's purchasing power will be eroded over time. |
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But examination of the eroded bank indicated that an ancient house, perhaps with other remains, was likely to be claimed by the next storm. |
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Remnants of this eroded calcarenite dune are still visible in the surrounding coastal landscape. |
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Most of the ancient walls have eroded away over the centuries, and very few sections remain today. |
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It can appear that the extinction occurs at the end of a polarity interval when the rest of that polarity interval was simply eroded away. |
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They argue that the atmosphere of Mars may have been eroded away by the solar wind because it had no magnetic field to protect it. |
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One relevant consequence is that the submarine canyons eroded are now far below the present sea level. |
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But the war had permanently eroded Britain's trading position in world markets through disruptions to trade and losses of shipping. |
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In the massive world of petty offense processing, that fundamental commitment to individuation has eroded. |
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The flow eroded the retaining ridge, causing the rock dam to fail and releasing lake water into the Atlantic. |
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These represent periods where no new sediments were laid down, or when earlier sedimentary layers were raised above sea level and eroded away. |
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Ought we be concerned that our rights to protest are being continually eroded under the guise of enhancing our safety? |
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The significance of the County of Flanders and its counts eroded through time, but the designation remained in a very broad sense. |
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The ridges and valleys formed when the exposed clay eroded faster than the exposed chalk, greensand, or sandstone. |
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Good examples of these structures can be found in the Channeled Scablands of eastern Washington, an area heavily eroded by the Missoula Floods. |
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It is in effect the eroded outer edges of the High Weald, revealing a mixture of sandstone outcrops within the underlying clay. |
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These approaches do not permanently protect beaches eroded by human activity, which requires that activity to be mitigated. |
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This flow eroded a path through the hills forming the gorge and permanently diverting the Severn southwards. |
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However, since the early 1990s, Gypsy moth infestations have eroded the dominance of oak forests. |
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The amount of submerged sand eroded is typically much greater than the amount of missing sand on shore. |
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An eroded beach with substantial submerged sand surrounding it may recover without nourishment. |
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Craiglethy is composed only of sandstone and volcanic material, any original overlying conglomerate material having been long eroded. |
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The cliffs on this part of the coast are being eroded as sections crumble away and landslides occur. |
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The mountains created by these tectonic processes have since been eroded to their bases, the region being largely flat today. |
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The surface over which the glacier moved was scoured and eroded by the ice, leaving a myriad of closed, undrained depressions in the bedrock. |
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The peat retains a great deal of water, but is easily eroded, particularly when it comes near to the coast. |
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These thick deposits accumulated as earlier Silurian rocks, uplifted by the formation of Pangaea, eroded and then deposited into river deltas. |
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Gully erosion can transport large amounts of eroded material in a small time period. |
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During a flood in November 1743 the river bed eroded and sea water could flow into the lake at high tide. |
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With his support eroded, Walpole retired in 1742 after over 20 years in office. |
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The Alpine, Pyrenean and Jura mountains are much younger and have less eroded forms. |
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Volcanic activity later resumed, producing scoria cones and lava flows atop the older eroded shield. |
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They live in a harsh landscape of eroded mesas just east of the raw lava flows and cinder cones of El Malpais National Monument. |
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An atoll is an island formed from a coral reef that has grown on an eroded and submerged volcanic island. |
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Feedbacks are also possible between rates of erosion and the amount of eroded material that is already carried by, for example, a river or glacier. |
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As the Norman lordships became increasingly Gaelicized and made alliances with native chiefs, whose power steadily increased, crown control slowly eroded. |
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The shell is broadly ovate, thick, and sharply pointed except when eroded. |
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To form the stacks, the sea gradually eroded along the joints and bedding planes where the softer chalk meets harder bedrock of the rock formations to create a cave. |
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Old Harry's Wife was another stack which was eroded through corrosion and abrasion, until the bottom was so weak the top fell away, leaving a stump. |
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Late Neogene clay and gravel, which are only a few tens of meters thick, rest upon the eroded surface of the folded and faulted strata that comprise Wrangel Island. |
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O'Connor argues that the increasing participation and perceived legitimacy of ENGOS during the Frist Green Wave eroded the bipartite bargaining model. |
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The gently dipping beds of rock were eroded, forming an escarpment. |
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The Cairngorms were formed 40 million years before the last ice age, when slight uplift raised an eroded peneplain based on an exposed granite pluton. |
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Furthermore, the United Kingdom's membership of the European Economic Community in 1973 eroded the concept of Britishness as distinct from continental Europe. |
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As the war dragged on, the Luftwaffe was eroded in strength. |
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If discipline had not been eroded over the years by successive governments and the woolly-minded, politically-correct lot, then we might just have a decent society. |
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It expanded into the sella turcica, eroded through the skull base into the left carotid space and extended down to the bifurcation of the left common carotid artery. |
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The extent of GA towards the north is unknown, but the amount of the eroded material can be interpolated and calculated between the Estonian mainland and Hiiumaa Island. |
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The dominion of the Western Roman Empire was gradually eroded by abuses of power, civil wars, barbarian migrations and invasions, military reforms and economic depression. |
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These differences depend upon whether the dip of the strata from which they have been eroded are either nearly vertical, moderately dipping, or gently dipping. |
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Richard knew that both Philip and his own brother John were starting to plot against him, and the morale of Saladin's army had been badly eroded by repeated defeats. |
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The timber defences were destroyed or damaged by the storm with most of the beach swept away, and a large amount of cliff eroded exposing the underlying clay. |
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Roads or bulkheads built along bluffs can drastically reduce the volume of sediment eroded, so that not enough material is being pushed along to maintain the spit. |
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The mountain is an easy climb although the path is very eroded at places. |
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Although the tops of the original Cape Fold Mountains were eroded away, they eroded much slower than the considerably softer Karoo deposits to the north. |
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The remnants of the Variscan uplands in France to the south were eroded down, resulting in layers of the New Red Sandstone being deposited across central England. |
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The colossal amount of water flowing over the waterfall created the curved shape of the cove because the lip was more heavily eroded than the sides. |
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Several physicians living near C-spine dumps have seen their dens eroded. |
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The sperm count has to drop quite a way before fertility is eroded. |
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Electrochemical grinding is a type of grinding in which a positively charged workpiece in a conductive fluid is eroded by a negatively charged grinding wheel. |
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Similarly, Arthur's Seat is the remains of a volcano dating from the Carboniferous period, which was eroded by a glacier moving west to east during the ice age. |
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The gaps in the archipelago of Central America filled in with material eroded off North America and South America, plus new land created by continued volcanism. |
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While inflation has eroded away the achievements of most films from the 1960s and 1970s, there are franchises originating from that period that are still active. |
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They may be composed of clay, silt, sand, or gypsum, eroded from the basin floor or shore, transported up the concave side of the dune, and deposited on the convex side. |
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At the same time, tectonic uplift forms a mountain belt in the overriding plate, from which large amounts of material are eroded and transported to the basin. |
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The geological substrate of the caatinga is severely eroded crystalline bedrock of the Precambrian Brazilian Shield and Paleozoic and Mesozoic sedimentary basins. |
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Because of the softness of the sediment, which lay below the high tide mark, tidal action eroded it, and within two weeks the footprints had been destroyed. |
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A single eroded cornulitid was found cemented to the hardground. |
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