This characteristic results from the absence of one or two layers in palisade, since the crystalliferous layer is always present. |
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Alison Roberts, 20, from Exeter University, works on the palisade of the Iron Age settlement at Sutton Common, near Doncaster. |
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The house was surrounded by yards and defended by a wooden palisade around the edge of the hill. |
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The hill where they were feigning to build their wooden palisade commanded a great view of the surrounding countryside. |
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There were signs of an assault in the damaged wooden palisade, but the abbey itself appeared unharmed. |
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Some were working outside a thick palisade of wooden palings which ran circling outside the buildings. |
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Leaf mesophyll is differentiated into palisade and spongy parenchyma, epidermis is already formed. |
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During such movement, oil molecules diffused into the cytoplasm of both palisade and spongy cells. |
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To one side along the palisade stood crofts which held penned goats, cattle, and a few sheep. |
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Earlier excavations revealed stone ramparts, a palisade and waterlogged remains in the ditches, including what looks like a wheel and a ladder. |
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He said that he had no specific verbal or written instruction from his employers concerning the climbing of walls or palisade fences. |
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The palisade fencing which was promised to seal off the play area in the Curragh Downs estate is now in place. |
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Enclosed by an unbroken palisade of building, this space seemed the perfect Eden. |
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The side was covered with a wooden palisade fence, with barbed wire on the top. |
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This is notably different from the one at La Joyanca, which was only about half a metre high and served as a base for a wooden palisade. |
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He looked around the village, which consisted of half a dozen mud huts and a wooden palisade with a ditch surrounding it. |
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There was a timber palisade around the top, which would have contained great stone buildings to hold the garrison. |
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Known as Kanata, the village will include three longhouses surrounded by a wooden palisade, framed by cedar poles and enclosed with cedar bark. |
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The ravelin, with its own wooden palisade and small blockhouse inside, made it more difficult for any attacker to assault the curtain wall. |
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Marc Boudreau from Clare has accepted to play the part of Alain Daigle who escaped from Winslow's palisade. |
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A side chapel is dedicated to the patroness of Ypres, Our Lady of Thuyne, a 'thuyne' being a sort of palisade fort. |
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They attacked the fort, capturing it after scaling the six-metre-high palisade and knocking down the gate with a battering ram. |
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Seeing this, the Iroquois reverted to the methods they used to lay seige to Amerindian villages and attempted to knock down the palisade. |
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Winslow quickly took possession of the parish church as his base camp and ordered his men to build a palisade for their defence. |
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An earth and palisade wall, later strengthened by a second wall, protected a cluster of longhouses. |
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Winslow's soldiers built a palisade of wooden pickets around the church, the cemetery, the priest's house, and two other dwellings. |
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He suggests that it may well be related to the activities of Winslow's troops since they were living inside the palisade. |
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Then they knocked down the largest trees near the palisade so that the trees fell on it. |
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The Hurons approached the palisade they wanted to breach, hiding behind large, movable wooden walls. |
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They may have been surmounted by a wooden palisade but no excavation has provided proof of this. |
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He then sailed north to Paracoa Bay where he built a palisade to protect his caravels before he careened them in order to repair their poorly maintained hulls. |
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The town was ablaze, the wooden palisade was a now raging ring of inferno. |
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Johannesburg City Parks has made the reserve a flash point of development, undertaking upgrades that include a new guardhouse, a borehole and a concrete palisade fence. |
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Steel palisade fences have now been put up to stem the tide of vandalism. |
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It consisted of a cleared zone of observation, a palisade where practicable, wooden watchtowers and forts at the road crossings. |
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Electrified palisade fences are usually made from painted mild steel, galvanized steel, stainless steel or aluminium. |
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It could be made high enough to frustrate improvised escalade and, unlike a wooden palisade, could be fitted with a parapet and crenellated firing positions along the top to give cover to defending archers and crossbowmen. |
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The troops usually required three to four hours to dig a ditch around the periphery, erect a rampart or palisade from timbers carried by each man, lay out streets, and pitch tents. |
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Over the course of time, the palisade might be replaced by a fine brick or stone wall, and the ditch serve also as a moat. |
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He instructed the engineer Jean Bourdon to make improvements to Fort Saint-Louis at Quebec, where he would reside as governor, by replacing the wooden palisade with walls of stone and masonry and by building a guardhouse. |
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Henry replaced the wooden palisade surrounding the upper ward with a stone wall interspersed with square towers and built the first King's Gate. |
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The wooden palisade at the centre of this photograph sits on top of the earth-built curtain wall linking two of the fort's six stone bastions, one of which can be seen at the end of the palisade. |
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All of these settlements, mother and daughters, were fortified with palisade walls and ditches, and contained streets aligned north-west south-east, north-west south-east-east—south-west. |
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Electrified palisade fences are used to protect isolated property and high security facilities, but also around some residential homes. |
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It was decided therefore to restore Fort Frontenac and surround Montreal with a palisade, since these two places were most vulnerable to attack by the Iroquois, the allies of the English. |
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Second, what the soldiers were guarding was not a solidly constructed fort, equipped with cannons, but a mission protected by a simple palisade in Amerindian style. |
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The whole complex was surrounded by a wooden palisade with four bastions. |
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A palisade of Canary palms formed an honour guard along the verges, while beds of golden cannas flamed from the central reservation. |
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When the ball was deliberately flung over the palisade, the British made the fatal mistake of opening the gates to allow the Indians to retrieve it. |
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Archeological excavations have confirmed that a row of stakes sometimes ran around the outside of the main palisade and that the inside of the enclosure was always round or oval. |
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The palisade fence is mechanically stronger than a typical steel cable electric fence to withstand impact from wildlife, small falling trees and wildfires. |
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Mesophyll was dorsiventral, with only one layer of palisade parenchyma. |
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The City of Johannesburg promotes the use of palisade fencing rather than opaque, usually brick, walls as criminals cannot hide as easily behind the fence. |
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It is thought that there was a wooden palisade on top of the turf. |
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The new palisade provided some security from attacks by the Virginia Indians for colonists farming and fishing lower on the Peninsula from that point. |
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This earliest phase of the castle would have been enclosed by a ditch and defended by a timber palisade, and probably had accommodation suitable for William. |
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The only structural evidence was a wooden palisade built in the ditch. |
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