The one way system was very successful in that it regularised the junctions because they were awfully dangerous and it got rid of that danger. |
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In advance of the line of attack the Luftwaffe heavily bombed all road and rail junctions, and concentrations of Polish troops. |
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One of the largest resorts in Quebec, Sutton boasts 40 kilometres of runs with 194 junctions allowing you to take a different route on each run. |
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The trust is now calling for more biker-friendly crash barriers to be erected on bends and near junctions. |
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It is one of the busiest junctions where policemen dread to man traffic during peak hours. |
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The city is physically contained by the orbital M25 motorway with its 31 junctions. |
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London's orbital M25, between junctions five and 21, was the worst followed by the A303 from Andover, Hampshire, onwards. |
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The apical ectodermal ridge consists of closely packed columnar epithelial cells, which are linked by extensive gap junctions. |
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Another plan includes installation of signal lights at some junctions on the ring roads. |
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Pedestrians should also remember to use the official crossing points at busy junctions. |
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He also suggested larger warning signs, the cross hatching of the left hand lane and better lighting on the approaches to major junctions. |
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The city has started doing construction work on facilities, roads, junctions and interchanges. |
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She thinks that without lights at those junctions motorists coming in on the smaller road would not get a look-in. |
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Then you think about those people on the roads who selfishly block junctions, who cut you up at a roundabout, who use filter lanes to queue jump. |
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The junctions with spacings of 5-30 mum presented concavo-concave morphologies, and the spacings could be changed with the growth conditions. |
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The Jubilee line follows a single path with no branches or junctions, although it's a very wiggly and indirect route. |
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The Sky Bus will ply through the city's main junctions, carrying 15,000 persons per hour. |
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All multinucleate and uninucleate components of the larva are connected by perforate plugged junctions. |
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Two new pedestrian crossings and changes to road junctions have also been made conditions of the planning permission for the new Bondgate store. |
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These transistors replace the traditional doped silicon junctions with passivated metal-silicon interfaces. |
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The overgrown hedges in the village are to be attended to and the road junctions repainted following recent road works. |
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It's known for being quite a sandy surface, with a lot of straights and then junctions at the end of those. |
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That's the moment to be there, at the junctions, spinning in the clearing water. |
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It tells users exactly where they are, and gives warnings about obstacles such as road junctions and crossings. |
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The primitive germinal cells are the spermatogonia, which lie peripherally in the tubule wall, outside the barrier of Sertoli cell junctions. |
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On the road, this proved to be a particularly nippy car about town, pulling off from junctions with a sprightly performance. |
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Acetylcholine acts as a transmitter between motor nerves and the fibres of skeletal muscle at all neuromuscular junctions. |
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The junctions of the rearrangements were then amplified by PCR and sequenced to reveal the breakpoints. |
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The Bangalore City Corporation will now take up 28 more skywalks in the city to help pedestrians cross busy roads and junctions. |
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The county council did decide to purchase 500 signposts to erect at junctions and dangerous corners. |
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When turning into the second of two junctions which are close to each other, the driver should not signal until he has passed the first junction. |
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What I have to do then is erect signposts at all the junctions where there are wrong turnings so as to help people past the danger points. |
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Only after a decade or more does one begin to see the tower cranes which betoken new construction in the sky near the motorway junctions. |
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Even the usual traffic signal at unmanned junctions gives the pedestrian very little time to cross. |
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A thin oxide spacer is used to displace P-type dopant implantation to P-type shallow source and drain extension junctions. |
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Early in the disease process, there are copious amounts of pulmonary secretions, which are associated with gaps in the tight junctions. |
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Events that stimulate muscle activity by raising sarcoplasmic calcium begin with neural excitation at neuromuscular junctions. |
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Last year local councils in London were given powers to fine motorists for bad driving, in particular for blocking yellow hatched box junctions. |
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As well as possible applications in quantum computing, tunable Josephson junctions could be used to sense tiny variations in magnetic fields. |
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The work reported in Science creates qubits from superconducting circuit elements called Josephson junctions. |
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Part of the plan was to introduce raised sections of road and double yellow lines at junctions. |
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It is observed in a variety of systems, from invertebrate neuromuscular junctions to neocortical synapses. |
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But it will be copied again and again, at junctions in the wider Internet, and so will e-mails sent by individuals. |
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The other diploblastic phylum, the Ctenophora, surprisingly, has not been reported to have septate junctions. |
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They connect with the developing keratinocytes through intercellular connections, or desmosomal junctions. |
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Some are the meeting of meridian pathways while others are junctions with an internal pathway of the meridian. |
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The cells were surrounded by a basal lamina and joined by primitive junctions. |
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The epidermal cells in the upper layers are connected to each other through extensive desmosomal junctions. |
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The places where the emitter joins the base and the base joins the collector are called junctions. |
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These sensitive areas are known as acupoints, and are thought to link to nerve junctions in other parts of the body. |
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Molecular analysis of repair junctions indicates efficient microhomology-mediated end joining. |
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Even sponges show this capacity in the transient development of septate junctions between certain cells. |
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The best known of these are atrial receptors, which are nerves ending mainly at the junctions of the great veins with the atria. |
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Strangely, the new system has not really reduced the number of traffic signals and junctions on either roads. |
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Areas near the new traffic-signalled junctions, a service road and a new pond are also being landscaped. |
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Longer buses are also far more likely to stop while blocking road junctions or pedestrian crossings, especially in heavy traffic. |
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Focal neuroendocrine membrane-bound dense-core granules surrounded by a slender halo and desmosomal intercellular junctions were demonstrated. |
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Bikes have their own lanes, traffic lights at junctions and dedicated road signs. |
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These signs were fixed at pedestrian crossings, junctions in residential roads and even on posts in the woodland idyll of Ham Common. |
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Vans carrying publicity materials are stopping at junctions across the State. |
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A cycle lane, access roads and improvements to junctions will be built into the scheme, scheduled to take a total of 15 years. |
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He also suggests off-road parking of autos at junctions wherever such a facility is available. |
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The basal cell layer is attached to the basement membrane by specialized cell junctions that include both hemi-desmosomes and focal contacts. |
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At the junctions, the Council also needs to replace the step kerb with drop kerbs suitable for wheelchairs. |
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Many of the deaths have resulted from conflicts with local traffic at crossroads and junctions along the single carriageway sections. |
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A thermocouple consists of wires made of two different metals or alloys, and it has two junctions. |
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Eight more junctions will get traffic light cameras to catch motorists driving through red lights. |
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It was a wrestle just to get the car out of the junctions on the main road. |
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And the masses also defy all caste and communal barriers on such crucial junctions and vote to restore social and national health. |
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The tight junctions between cells help to prevent microbial invasion. |
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If MgB2 does have the properties Cardwell suggests, it could be used to improve microwave devices and Josephson junctions, effectively superconducting transistors. |
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This structure is consistent with the mechanism of the particle formation, where growing insulin fibrils encounter other fibrils and link together to form junctions. |
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A coordinated assault on five or more junctions in the 10,500 miles of pipeline that connect the five main Saudi oilfields could cripple the industry. |
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This gets a little bigger fairly quickly, and passes a couple of uninviting junctions, before entering a wide bedding passage with a stream flowing through it. |
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Acceptance gaps can be created either by headways in a traffic stream or by traffic control devices such as traffic signals at junctions and pelican crossings. |
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These junctions can be made atomically sharp and defect free, allowing for the production of high performance electronics integrated within each single nanostructure. |
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This quantum mechanical tunneling process is an important mechanism for thin barriers such as those in metal-semiconductor junctions on highly-doped semiconductors. |
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Motorists were urged to regularly use mirrors and wing mirrors, be more alert at traffic lights, and check for bikers when pulling out at junctions or roundabouts. |
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Throughout the world, there are Anglosphere nations at key junctions. |
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A new survey has discovered the top ten reasons why a learner driver may fail to pass their test, with incorrect observation at junctions coming in first place. |
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Hence the plug is a specialized cytoplasmic structure, unlike desmosomes, gap junctions, or septate junctions, which are formed from membrane appositions. |
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Gearing down for corners, junctions and roundabouts starts off as a novel experience with the Sentronic, and quickly becomes efficient second nature. |
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John and Gary reckoned their red runabout, with a top speed of 60 mph, was an advantage because the 180 mph sports cars were shooting past junctions. |
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Signalmen, more used to manhandling the heavy levers of Victorian signal boxes, have begun controlling one of the area's busiest junctions with the click of a mouse. |
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The turning circle means every mini roundabout becomes a three-point turn, and at oblique junctions you absolutely cannot see if anything's coming. |
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The elastases disrupt the integrity of the epithelial barrier by disrupting epithelial cell tight junctions and interfering with mucociliary clearance. |
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At one three-way junction on the outskirts, there is the familiar and pure chaos that results when such junctions are left untended and unsignalled. |
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The project will include four subways for the heavy pedestrian traffic to cross at Bommanahalli, Garvebhavipalya, Kudlu and Singasandra junctions. |
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Numerous studies have examined the role of paracrine interactions within islets and the importance of gap junctions to islet stimulus-secretion coupling. |
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The Peltier effect occurs when you take any two members of the thermoelectric series and connect wires made of them to form a circuit with two junctions. |
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The road improvements involve the closure of the eastbound carriageway of the motorway between the two junctions, with a contraflow system on the westbound carriageway. |
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How they can move off from traffic lights with phone held to the ear, changing gear and turning across junctions all with one hand is astoundingly dextrous. |
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At most junctions, the crossing time is just a few seconds. Also, vehicles, especially two-wheelers, begin to move even before the signal turns green. |
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Try to avoid becoming too predictable or repetitive, particularly at regular junctions. |
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The two stretches, between junctions 4 and 5 and between junctions 10a and 8, are two of the busiest sections on the entire motorway. |
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At junctions, where Supertram and train movements can conflict with road traffic, fixed signals are provided in addition to points indicators. |
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Points indicators are provided at junctions to indicate the route which is set through the points. |
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Gap junctions are specialized membrane channels that allow cell-to-cell communication between neighboring cells. |
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Between junctions 22 and 25, the road is used as a border between the metropolitan boroughs of Calderdale and Kirklees. |
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In Greater Manchester, the motorway shares seven junctions, 12 to 18, with the M60 motorway. |
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At these junctions, a nerve ending normally sends chemical signals across a gap to stimulate muscle contraction. |
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The new road involved the construction of a series of new junctions, bridges and viaducts to the east of Leeds. |
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Between Eccles and Pole Moor, 67 motorway crossings were required, including seven viaducts and eight junctions. |
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The new stretch will consist of a three-lane dual carriageway with service roads, cycle lane and signalised junctions. |
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The street grid is laid out with a system of plazas that are similar to roundabouts or junctions. |
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If this scheme is eventually implemented, will the council paint the kerbstones white at road junctions? |
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Based on the findings of the study, the RTA has endorsed the blocking of leftward turns and U-turns in five junctions. |
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In a microbiome that is off balance, the microvilli and the tight junctions found in the small intestine are not functioning properly. |
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The trouble with the previous devices is that, using one or two Josephson junctions, they put out either half a millivolt or a millivot. |
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Junction 41 comprises two different junctions, one for traffic to and from local destinations to the west and one for places to the east. |
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All the junctions should be improved and the lay-bys upgraded, and it should be three lanes both ways. |
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Clearly safety has to be paramount on the route and with some of the A55's junctions little more than T-Junctions this work has to be welcomed. |
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The thermocouples are arranged so that the three junctions lie as closely as possible to the axis of symmetry. |
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In patients with FMS, majority of the tender points are localized in musculotendinous junctions. |
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They overtake at pedestrian crossings, park in the zig-zag area, stop in yellow box junctions and park indiscriminately. |
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The total grain boundary area and the length of triple grain junctions increase accordingly. |
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These act as the junctions, or corners, of the supermolecules and allow many short DNA sequences to be linked together in a modular way. |
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The motorway has major junctions with the M56 and M62 at Warrington, giving access to Chester, Manchester and Liverpool. |
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Many junctions are so perfect that not even a knife fits between the stones. |
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The major junction stations are Salisbury and Westbury, and important junctions are also found at Swindon, Chippenham and Trowbridge. |
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These areas are named triple junctions and can be found in several places across the world today. |
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The researchers have developed a photovoltaic cell, comprising of 36 individual arrays of silicon nanowires featuring radial p-n junctions. |
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Model performance improvement for a calibration-free temperature measurement based on p-n junctions. |
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By creating stacks of p-n junctions in the cells, researchers have pushed the performance to 32 percent. |
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Sertoli cells were connected to each other by intercellular junctions and they were adherent to the basement membrane by hemidesmosomes. |
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The origin of new divergent boundaries at triple junctions is sometimes thought to be associated with the phenomenon known as hotspots. |
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The new road would be of single carriageway standard, with a number of roundabout junctions, as well as a new bridge over the River Eden. |
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Pronounced widening of the wrists and beading of the ribs at the costochondral junctions were also confirmed by X-ray. |
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Temporal canal fused to pterotic, extending anteriorly to form junctions with supraorbital and infraorbital canals. |
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The immediate vicinity of road junctions and traffic islands, where vehicles are usually moving slowly anyway, seem favoured spots. |
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Tumor cells usually contain intermediate filaments, have cell junctions, and may contain glycogen, dense core granules, and neurotubles. |
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Another element that was adopted was the use of roundabouts at junctions instead of traffic lights which would allow traffic to flow freely. |
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The road then passes Beckermet and Calder Bridge, junctions here give access to the Sellafield site. |
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Most of them were found in areas where the cuticle folds, or at arthrodial membrane locations, especially at the leg-thorax junctions. |
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The M90, A9 and A93 all meet at Broxden Junction, one of the busiest and most important road junctions in Scotland. |
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Such cairns are often placed at junctions or in places where the trail direction is not obvious. |
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The M62 has no junctions numbered 1, 2, or 3, or even an officially numbered 4, because it was intended to start in Liverpool proper, not in its outskirts. |
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Ultrastructural studies show the whorling cells of LHN to possess classic features of Schwann cells, including continuous basal lamina, but few rudimentary junctions. |
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He and his colleagues observe these junctions intact in anesthetized mice. |
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The M6 Toll, the UK's first toll motorway, runs through the county with junctions in Weeford near Lichfield, Cannock and joins the M6 heading north towards Stafford. |
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LeftCeturns and U-turns have been blocked at some junctions along the Dubai Tram route to prevent potential collisions between cars and the new services. |
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North of junctions with the B6241 Preston ring road, junction 1 of the M55 is a roundabout on the A6 connected by slip roads with the motorway above. |
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Northampton is near junctions 15, 15a and 16 of the M1 motorway which connects Northampton with London at its most southern point and Leeds at its most northern. |
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At the cell biology meeting, Fishman described his plans to use this procedure to study how cells maintain ties, called gap junctions, to one another. |
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Well known researchers of gap junctions offer insight into the field. |
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It has been shown that in the process of oocyte maturation, meiotic resumption is associated with the loss of gap junctions between the oocyte and the granulosa cells. |
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Ancient cities dating to the First Dynasty of Egypt arose along both its Nile and Red Sea junctions, testifying to the route's ancient popularity. |
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Road building standards, for motorways in particular, allow asymmetrically designed road junctions, where merge and diverge lanes differ in length. |
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Older signage at certain junctions on the M7 and M11 can be seen reflecting this earlier scheme, where for example N11 and M11 can be seen coexisting. |
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Neighboring epithelial cells are also connected to each other through apical junctions, protein complexes containing adhesion molecules, such as cadherins, linked to catenins. |
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The same announcement said that the road from Scotswood to North Brunton would be widened to three lanes each way, with four lanes each way between some junctions. |
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Green cat's eyes are used to alert motorists to upcoming junctions. |
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The Brynglas Tunnels on the M4 are a cause of traffic delays as the motorway narrows to two lanes in each direction between junctions 25 and 26 to pass through the tunnels. |
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Two other light arrangement indicate a point direction at junctions. |
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In order for cells in tissues to function in an integrated manner, specialized junctions consisting of clustered cell-adhesion molecules are essential. |
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A notable structure between junctions 21 and 22 on the uphill section towards Windy Hill is the Rakewood Viaduct which carries the road over the Longden End Brook. |
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It is alleged minibus driver Eduardo Bastos stopped on the southbound carriageway between junctions 16 and 15 near Henley-in-Arden, without pulling onto the hard shoulder. |
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