Because toads have permeable skin, RBG is also found in high concentrations in the blood. |
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The walls made without cement are permeable and thus need no separate provision for drainage. |
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These well drained, moderately to rapidly permeable soils were formed in glacial outwash. |
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If a solution and solvent or two solutions of different strength are separated by a semi permeable membrane, osmosis can occur. |
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Finally, all the Ames test strains have defective polysaccharide outer coats, to make them more permeable to the test chemicals. |
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The unset cement is very permeable until it develops sufficient. strength to prevent fluid influx. |
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The architect ensured that some rainwater would go into the soil by specifying permeable grid pavers. |
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The dialysis membrane is permeable to all the plasma constituents, with the exception of plasma proteins. |
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The charge selective permeability facilitates the studies of the membrane transport mechanism by means of permeable ion probes. |
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A selectively permeable membrane is a membrane that does not permit the free unhampered movement of all solutes present. |
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Latex gloves are permeable to chemicals, so nitrile gloves are your best choice. |
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These mobile ions are called counter-ions and the membrane is selectively permeable to them. |
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Limiting conditions are considered to be soil or geologic layers that are either insufficiently or excessively permeable. |
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The underlying soils are acidic, cherty, infertile, and permeable to water. |
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In addition to palladium and its alloys, other metals and oxides in nonporous forms are known to be selectively permeable to some gases. |
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A permeable seed imbibes water readily when available, while an impermeable one does not take up water for days or longer. |
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This karsting provides highly permeable rocks in which the sulphide minerals sphalerite and galena represent the valuable mineralization. |
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North of it lies a more permeable medium in the form of sand and gravel overlying silty clay with gravel. |
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Similarly, soils that are permeable tend to facilitate subsurface flow including interflow and throughflow, rather than surface run-off. |
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Reverse osmosis is a process for desalting water that uses membranes that are permeable to water but essentially impermeable to salt. |
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The Avilla series consists of very deep, well drained, moderately permeable soils that formed in gravelly and loamy alluvium. |
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Dense refractory metals or their alloys have been found to be selectively permeable to hydrogen. |
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Magnesium alloys, on the other hand, form a loose, permeable oxide coating on the molten metal surface. |
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A semi-permeable membrane is otherwise known as a selectively permeable membrane. |
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The most permeable soils are granular and consist of a fair amount of sand or gravel. |
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The cold weather camouflage parka fabric is a triple layer laminated waterproof, windproof, and moisture-vapor permeable nylon material. |
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The channel is impermeable to anions but is permeable to a diverse group of cations. |
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The surface of gravel or blocks set on stone provides another permeable layer. |
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The shell is freely permeable to small gas molecules, including water vapor. |
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Many soils have a topsoil layer that is more permeable than the clay subsoil. |
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This permeable layer could consist of stacks of rocks or soil between the two ponds. |
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These channels appear to be plasma membrane-located and non-selective, being permeable to both monovalent and divalent cations. |
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Their home designs use the natural landscape as well as permeable materials to capture and retain stormwater onsite. |
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Nails are also permeable, which means they let in liquids that come in contact with them. |
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There are potentially significant issues with respect to blinding of the surfaces of permeable pavements with fine material. |
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Moreover, only a minimal percentage of users change the highly permeable privacy preferences. |
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In the hot, humid conditions of the Asian tropics, buildings are traditionally elevated above ground, with overhanging eaves and thin permeable walls to encourage ventilation. |
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The upper reservoir has a permeable bottom and contains forest litter, while the lower reservoir is impermeable. |
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Given that the shell that covers the siphuncle is its only permeable surface, the interchange of fluids can take place only through this structure. |
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Biological membranes are expected to be permeable to the uncharged ammonia molecule, which makes transport of NH 3 across membranes independent of transport proteins. |
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In an effort to keep pests off the parsnips we began cloaking the beds with Agrofabric, a translucent, permeable rowcover made of woven fiberglass. |
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Kuo said the slope remained stable during Mindulle because a permeable structure consisting of large stones wrapped in gabions, or metal cylinders, prevented any landslides. |
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We ask you not to wear hard permeable contact lenses for 3 weeks and soft lenses for 4 days before the examination. |
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In others, special permeable films allow naturally respiring produce to form its own atmosphere without the addition of external gases. |
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By changing the blood-brain barrier and making it more permeable, it means other toxic and potentially toxic chemicals can get in there. |
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The probe is designed in such a way that substantially only the gas permeable tube is located inside the fermenter. |
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There must be some other world, unimaginably fraught and violent, contiguous to ours but not normally permeable. |
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High strength Polyester fabric with vapor permeable Polyurethane coating and Titanium finish for reflection of radiant heat. |
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The deposit must be permeable to permit percolation of the mineral solutions. |
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Groundwater is found at varying depths underneath the earth's surface, in permeable rocks known as aquifers which are saturated by the infiltration of rainfall. |
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It is rather that, in being so entirely permeable to the public view, privacy becomes merely an opportunity for conspicuous consumption. |
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The thick skin is an adaptation to better protect reptiles from the water loss that occurs with the permeable skin of amphibians. |
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Organisms that live in aquatic environments and whose integument is permeable to water, therefore, must be able to contend with osmotic pressure. |
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Silicone is permeable to air so the balloon would deflate to some degree after several hours if it were filled with air. |
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In the case of hypersensitive skin, these cells are less well attached to each other, which thus makes the skin more fragile and permeable. |
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As in a forest ecosystem, the soil will be naturally permeable, loose and aerated. |
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The Kremlin has also discovered that the western political system is weak, permeable and susceptible to foreign cash. |
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That was assuming that the tailings pond was sitting over top of permeable sand material. |
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If this exterior, material separation now becomes permeable to the world, I will be entirely responsible for my own enclosure. |
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It seeps into the groundwater through the permeable soil layers of the Rhine. |
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Madagascar's borders are more or less free from scrutiny, meaning that they are permeable and porous to any clandestine trafficking in arms. |
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Liko's slings for bath and shower are made from permeable plasticcoated net. |
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In border regions the impact of the permeable coexistence of different jurisdictions is most felt in everyday police work. |
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The borders of these eight countries are permeable and largely uncontrolled. |
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A further advantage of the new render is its property of being simultaneously water repellent and permeable to water vapor. |
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Ideally they should drain to a suitable soakaway or permeable surface, see below. |
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The show is in a state of openness, and is permeable to the flow of the street. |
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So I laid some permeable membrane down to stop the weeds from growing upwards and emptied the contents of the big compost bin into the smaller compost bin. |
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For instance, the detection of the slow ejection kinetics may be impeded by the photobleaching effect and the possible diffusion of the probe through the permeable capsids. |
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We concluded that the roots responded to these phytotoxins by inducing barriers in the vulnerable, permeable parts, with the result that less toxin is absorbed. |
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Terrestrial amphibians face a challenge analogous to that of marine intertidal animals, in that they are highly permeable animals in a potentially desiccating environment. |
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Diffusion of water, a process known as osmosis, will occur only when the two chambers are separated from one another by a selectively permeable membrane. |
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A selectively permeable membrane allows virtually free passage of water and certain small molecules, but restricts the movement of large solute molecules. |
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The use of selectively permeable membranes to retain macromolecules, but allow the free diffusion of low molecular weight solutes, is one of the oldest biochemical techniques. |
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Applesauce may serve as a good illustration of a liquid which also contains structurized solid material that in itself has selectively permeable properties. |
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The line between abled and disabled is a permeable one that we will all move across throughout our lives for varying durations and with varying degrees of limitations. |
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The absorbent article includes a liquid permeable cover, a liquid-impermeable baffle and an absorbent enclosed by the cover and the baffle to form a pad. |
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Further addition of the detergent renders the membrane more permeable. |
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The surface texture is not necessarily always a permeable membrane. |
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The rough grade was thinly plated with permeable sandy loam soils. |
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At the same time, it would become a permeable border for Kashmiris, who could move back and forth easily. |
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A typical French quarter block contains a dense but permeable aggregate of buildings, like a sponge. |
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The fuel must have high mechanical strength and must be non-caking so that it will form a permeable bed, although recent developments have reduced these restrictions to some extent. |
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Vertical drainage is provided by including a layer of permeable material, such as pumice or drain plating, between the impervious sheeting and the groundsheet. |
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For example, the sequestered CO2 will mineralize with the rock, be trapped in small pores of the permeable rock, and dissolve into water trapped deep within the formation. |
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As soon as the waterproof sheeting shows damage and becomes permeable to water, when wet through the resistance sinks to approx. 100 kiloohms and below. |
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Volatile compounds that pervaporate through the permeable tube wall are transported by a carrier gas to the outside of the fermenter for analysis. |
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Bolometric detectors are very often subject to these types of constraints because the package has to be permeable to infrared radiation while keeping the detectors in a vacuum environment at a stable temperature. |
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Ecologically significant areas can be taken out of cultivation, or can be cultivated using particularly ecofriendly methods to make them more hospitable and permeable for flora and fauna. |
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Most of Lebanon's geology is highly permeable karstic rock, which is easily contaminated by surface pollution. |
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This includes a stout casing and what is known as a permeable polymer separator, which stops the electrodes in the cell touching each other and causing a short circuit. |
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Glaciofluvial spillway deposits across the area are typically coarse-grained, permeable sands and gravels which yield good water supplies, although they are particularly vulnerable to impacts from land use activities. |
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The porous and permeable rock layer that contains these fluids is covered by an impermeable cap rock-often salt or shale-that does not let them pass through. |
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Product with a strong bonding property on various bases, absorption regulator, permeable, able to be covered with paint or perspiring mineral coverings. |
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The propped fracture is permeable enough to allow the flow of gas, oil, salt water and hydraulic fracturing fluids to the well. |
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A moisture vapour permeable water impervious sheet or strip of medical padding for orthopaedic use which comprises lofted non-woven fabric comprising synthetic fibres and which has wax at a surface layer of the fabric. |
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Hydrophobic but permeable to water vapour, silicones used in architectural coatings, façade renderings or as water repellents provide unequalled and long-lasting protection to your walls and façades to keep them looking good. |
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Some sources state that cormorants have waterproof feathers while others say that they have water permeable feathers. |
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This definition rests on the physical assumption that there are readily available walls permeable only to heat. |
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Also, this virus must spread through skin lesions or permeable membranes such as the eye. |
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This requires the coke or charcoal to be in large enough particles to be permeable, meaning there cannot be an excess of fine particles. |
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Streams flowing from higher impermeable slopes sink into the ground when they reach permeable limestone. |
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On top of this is a combination of slowly permeable and well drained fine loam over clay. |
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Uranium is concentrated in relatively oxygenated waters, circulating through lithified and permeable, fluvial sedimentary rocks of the Maritimes Basin. |
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The self-etch system only makes the smear layer permeable without completely removing it because of the lack of the separate etching step. |
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The protected designation area is situated in a region characterised by a permeable subsoil, composed essentially of limestone and clay, and by a large number of streams and springs. |
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Napping permits a more permeable cake on the fabric surface but, in some cases, is more difficult to clean than unnapped cloth. |
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The outer shell is made of rip-stop water resistant nylon taffeta, the fill is made of micro-fiber plus and the lining is made of soft touch permeable polyester. |
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Insensitivity to anaesthetics may point to another phenomenon: the blood-brain barrier may be less permeable, which may contribute to the absence of the familiar effects of alcohol. |
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A porous and permeable subsurface rock layer that contains a separate accumulation of petroleum that is confined by impermeable rock or water barriers and is characterized by a single pressure system. |
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Eakin did her best to make the division as permeable as possible. |
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This natural permeable zone allows for subaqueous placement of tailings, which has advantages in terms of radiation protection and prevention of ice formation with the tailing mass. |
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The system has to be as permeable as possible to enable companies to do business in all of the provinces, in a way that is completely consistent with the jurisdiction exercised by Quebec and the provinces in this area. |
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In permeable monasticism, people were able to move freely in and out of the monastic system at different points of life. |
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Electrospining concept has been used to incorporate ammonia borane core and polystyrene sheath in a nano matrix which is permeable to hydrogen. |
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Part fable, part Trojan myth, part road movie, the play unfolds across permeable planes of space, time and memory in a dazzlingly intricate narrative. |
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To this end, it will also be essential that the structure called upon to accommodate the debate is not a place reserved for experts alone, but rather a permeable structure which is open to external contributions. |
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Clean your sidewalk and driveway with a broom, not with water and try to wash your car on gravel, grass or other permeable surfaces so that soaps, dirt and oil do not enter the storm drain system. |
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For example, children are more susceptible to the effects of some toxic chemicals because their blood-brain barrier is more permeable than adults. |
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The creative imagination is the Chaos terminus a quo and the World is the terminus ad quem, the polar character of which sets the permeable bounds to meaning and existence. |
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They are porous and highly permeable to rainfall, and allow rainwater to slow percolate into the soil below, instead of flowing over the surface as runoff. |
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In addition to its ability to help increase the effective R-value of a wall, Tyvek Therma Wrap is an excellent vapor permeable air and water barrier, like all Tyvek materials. |
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One hundred thirty-one small, highly permeable masonry wall specimens built of concrete blocks or of bricks were treated with cement-water paints or with other waterproofings. |
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These rivers are found in regions with limited or highly variable rainfall, or can occur because of geologic conditions such as a highly permeable river bed. |
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At the end of the Ice Age the limestone, which had been frozen solid, once again became permeable, allowing the water to disappear through its joints. |
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The Sardinian soils, even those plains are slightly permeable, with aquifers of lacking and sometimes brackish water and very small natural reserves. |
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Rainwater sinks through permeable rock to form an underground reservoir. |
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