Second, stem cells may prove to be an indispensable source of transplantable cells and tissues for repair and regeneration. |
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It's a special patch that encourages regeneration of bone matter and aligns it correctly too so we don't need to make a cast. |
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The whole centre is in need of regeneration and, as true to form, it is the private investor that sets the standard. |
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Short dry periods provide insufficient time for regeneration and involution of mammary gland tissue. |
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His work has established the inhibitory role astrocytes can play in preventing central nervous system regeneration. |
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It was as a viable project with potential for economic regeneration and ecological improvements. |
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Healing is expected within two weeks by regeneration of epidermis from keratinocytes within sweat glands and hair follicles. |
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He is likely to make economic regeneration and social inclusion keynotes of his tenure. |
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In its broadest sense salvation includes regeneration, sanctification, and glorification. |
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But its recovery is near completion and the enlightened and adventurous regeneration is attracting record numbers of visitors. |
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Contracts for the regeneration project are set to be awarded within the next few weeks. |
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A decision has yet to be made over whether Corbet Close will join the regeneration scheme. |
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However, attempts to produce such transgenics have failed owing to the poor regeneration rates of the somatic embryogenesis protocols used. |
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Plans for regeneration of the world-famous hotel were given the green light by Lancaster City councillors this week. |
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In most cases, reforestation is done by planting seedlings or using natural regeneration methods. |
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A priority is supporting regeneration in areas with high levels of social and economic difficulty. |
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Indeed, even the mild intervention of a slash burn, to clear the cutover area of debris, would impede the forest's natural regeneration. |
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What natural men need is regeneration, and what the regenerate need is to be edified in the faith. |
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Treasury Holdings is promoting the urban regeneration of Sligo through the redevelopment of the town centre. |
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But this is now changing as the city council is encouraging regeneration of old residential stock. |
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Failure to support economic regeneration in the east could be destabilizing for the EU as a whole. |
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The Urban Task Force is still trying to promote urban regeneration and efficient land use. |
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Opponents to one of Waterford city's regeneration projects fear that valuable artefacts may be destroyed by developers' digging. |
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Lack of sleep affects the body's physical regeneration which occurs during sleep. |
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Chloronemal filaments, which are produced following spore germination or tissue regeneration, only grow in the light. |
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Like milk thistle, artichoke stimulates the regeneration of liver tissue and is non-toxic. |
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Blood is important by providing neurotrophic factors in the process of peripheral nerve regeneration. |
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This is helping to engineer skeletal regeneration and tissue morphogenesis in molecular terms. |
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The reparative response of a fetus to injury is regeneration of tissue without scar. |
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For regeneration of cells and tissues, magnets over 7000 gauss are extremely effective. |
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From this dikaryon, the two progenitor haploid genomes were recovered by protoplast formation and regeneration. |
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The treatments helped manage his pain, promoted tissue regeneration and reduced scar tissue formation. |
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Though still premature, these findings could eventually impact research into stem cells, tissue regeneration and aging. |
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During tissue regeneration, cells release enzymes that degrade natural biomaterials at specific peptide sequences. |
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The muscle fibers between the scar tissue showed fruitless attempts at regeneration by the formation of multinucleated buds. |
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Niacinamide inhibits free radical formation and facilitates beta-cell regeneration in vivo and in vitro. |
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These receptors are involved in the regulation of metabolism, embryogenesis, tissue regeneration, and cell proliferation. |
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Leaf disc transformation and shoot regeneration were performed as described previously. |
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By incorporating specific peptide motifs into these hydrogels it is possible to create optimal chemical environments for axonal regeneration. |
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Reductive regeneration of the oxidized catalytic thiol depends on glutathione, thioredoxin, glutaredoxin, cyclophilin, and tryparedoxin. |
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Some of the diesel fuel is reformulated into hydrogen and carbon monoxide for superior regeneration. |
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Recycling of oxidized intermediates, as well as regeneration of the reductants, affect the redox state of specific redox pairs. |
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Today she said she wanted to get everyone, young and old, involved in the community's regeneration. |
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The town centre partnership is fearful that an amusement arcade will set back the recent regeneration activity. |
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In addition, camels and cattle browse young shoots of this tree, thus limiting its development and possibilities of regeneration. |
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A toning lotion with a much-cherished scent, lavender water purifies the skin while promoting its regeneration. |
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His topic was the regeneration of damaged heart muscle, by use of bone marrow stem cells. |
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One stage at which the process may break down is the regeneration of plants from the fused protoplasts. |
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The regeneration of old maltings in Mistley has led to a call for a bypass around the village. |
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It will always need constant regeneration, constant effort, and constant activity to continue. |
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Complete cutaneous wound healing involves a biologically complex two-year process of cellular regeneration and repair. |
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If the Executive is serious about delivering on its projects it should see about copying the example for riverside regeneration set in England. |
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These placed an emphasis on the role of charity in encouraging moral regeneration and on the virtues of self-reliance and respectability. |
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Daly, with his interest in the regeneration of old buildings, was an obvious candidate for designer. |
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Finally, the number of shoots and plantlets was counted again and summed with the first counts to give the total regeneration. |
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We will be contributing to the development of a master plan and its links to existing regeneration projects. |
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Novelty playing cards showing Canvey's artistic welcome sign have been printed to raise cash to help regeneration work. |
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Alder, ash, birch, cherry and oak will be planted and natural regeneration encouraged. |
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The organisation was formed in 1998 and aims to use creativity to help social regeneration. |
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Manchester's much-vaunted city centre regeneration is taking its toll on our well-being, according to a health expert. |
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A week-long exhibition showing proposals for the multi-million pound regeneration of the rundown area was launched yesterday in Park Library. |
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The cleared land will aid the regeneration of Parson Cross that may include more accommodation for the elderly. |
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The multi-million pound regeneration of a deprived area of Rochdale could lead to financial ruin and homelessness. |
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The government believes the Games would promote urban regeneration, employment, health and tourism. |
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The new transport interchange planned for Nelson could kick-start vital regeneration of the town centre. |
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Cash has been secured to help kick-start a flagship regeneration project in Lancaster. |
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A historic Bradford building which housed a flagship regeneration scheme is to be sold as a potential major housing development. |
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Studies in the lung have focused mainly on the regeneration of pulmonary epithelium. |
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Glucosamine is the foundational structure of many compounds associated with repair and regeneration of connective tissue. |
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Challenges to the new technology are in the areas of data monitoring, grooming, and regeneration for improved signal to noise. |
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If the optical signal is weak, the OEO system allows selective regeneration of the signal. |
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Corvis has created a system that shoots photons long distances without any electronic regeneration. |
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Her biomorphic forms are more metamorphic, suggesting growth and regeneration, as well as body metaphors. |
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This is a time for community landcare volunteers to find out about cutting edge best practice bush regeneration knowledge and protocol. |
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Among vertebrates, newts and other urodele amphibians show a remarkable capacity for regeneration. |
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An initiative to provide low-cost affordable homes above shops in York has been praised as a model of urban regeneration by the Government. |
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It is nothing less than to attempt the moral regeneration of British public life. |
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It is noted that fissiparous and cometforming starfish have entrained the regeneration pathway into their life cycle. |
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The newly identified isomerase enzyme plays a crucial role in the regeneration of rhodopsin visual pigment in the retina after light exposure. |
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Although fish axons are capable of regeneration, they are nevertheless repelled by mammalian CNS myelin and oligodendrocytes. |
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Following this, morphallactic regeneration occurs within the body segments adjacent to the new head. |
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He coined the terms morphallaxis and epimorphosis to describe the two major types of regeneration. |
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The Dublin firm has a strong track record in urban regeneration and is also strong on high-density residential developments. |
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The exhibition features maps and plans of the proposed regeneration schemes as well as explanations of the designs and the work behind the ideas. |
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Wound healing is a complicated process which includes inflammation, granulation and regeneration stages. |
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Welland is undistracted in its commitment to helping find and fund innovative solutions to economic regeneration in rural areas. |
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This rich lotion detoxicates injured skin and promotes regeneration of affected areas by inducing tissue replacement. |
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Talks are taking place about developing the land known locally as the Whatley's site as part of a village centre regeneration scheme. |
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Considerable differences were found in the speed of regeneration and in the development of the wax films. |
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Cutting crime is a combination of economic regeneration, good old-fashioned coppering and effective early intervention. |
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The British like to engage in self-loathing, and nowhere more than in matters of urban regeneration and general transport. |
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More than 700 decaying homes are to be demolished and rebuilt in a sweeping multi-million regeneration programme. |
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This system can also contribute to fuel saving by permitting regeneration at opportune times such as when the vehicle is on overrun. |
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Major alterations costing huge sums had been made to the building to make it suitable for the regeneration scheme. |
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But the notion of chemotropism came to fruition only a decade later in the context of nerve regeneration. |
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It emphasized sin, regeneration, and grace, and had a mystical, millenarian content. |
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Other features include standard wireless radio controls, wide-stance outriggers, hydraulic regeneration, and stability monitoring capability. |
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Only mononuclear protoplasts were capable of complete cell wall regeneration and mitotic division. |
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Wolff and Ware found similar regeneration when examining vegetation along the fall line in Virginia. |
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Images of chrysalises and butterflies suggest regeneration for the survivors. |
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By tissue culture methods, these can then be used for the regeneration of another plant like the parent. |
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The protection and regeneration programs led to the resumption of pastoral land in the catchment area. |
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The Government hopes that many of the pathfinders will be run by bodies who have not traditionally led regeneration programmes. |
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It will be a great boost for the local economy and hopefully kick-start a wider regeneration of the area. |
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Coupled with tyrosine, the caffeine in guarana helps promote muscle performance and neurotransmitter regeneration. |
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Anther culture involves the induction of embryoid formation from immature pollen and subsequent regeneration of embryoids into plantlets. |
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Using a rat model of pulmonary emphysema, we found that alveolar regeneration was insufficient in the emphysematous tissues. |
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In my former life grace was a mystery limited to regeneration, now it's simply amazing and all consuming. |
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In line with this urban regeneration, 16 km of depressed docklands have been turned into a trendy bar and club area. |
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The regeneration of canal-side cafe society in Manchester and Birmingham hardly adds up to a creative industry. |
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Histological results demonstrate regeneration and the presence of the spindle fibers responsible for afferent signal generation. |
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Lower Broughton is one of several areas in central Salford which are to be targeted for regeneration in the coming years. |
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Palmarosa may help to boost cellular regeneration in the skin, which may help smooth wrinkles and may even tone up crepey skin on the neck. |
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Its circular shape invokes the tradition of associating circles with regeneration and wholeness. |
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The regeneration project manager said a hydrographical survey of the area using geophysical scanning would take place next month. |
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This fascinating book is about community, urban regeneration and green issues, and the cycle of life. |
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Pembrokeshire County Council has just agreed to acquire the property under compulsory purchase as part of the regeneration of the Dockyard. |
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Perhaps, the artist implies, there is some hope of regeneration, after all, for this post-apocalyptic landscape. |
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It is a method and apparatus for capacitive deionization, electrochemical purification, and regeneration of electrodes. |
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Traffic disbenefits will have to be balanced against the regeneration of this site and any other planning or community benefits which may accrue. |
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At a local level, regeneration programmes must not only be fair to all groups but also be seen to treat communities even-handedly. |
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Although it is difficult to unequivocally equate regeneration with predatory activity, there is compelling evidence for just such a conclusion. |
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There is no more obvious symbol of vitality and resurrection than the annual regeneration of flowering plants, she says. |
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Now the borough council has invited town councillors to a meeting to discuss issues connected with the town centre and its regeneration. |
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The residual effect can cause soil infertility and block the natural regeneration of vegetation for a prolonged period of time. |
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Clytemnestra, like Eve, is a fallen woman who must be defeated and killed in order to allow for the regeneration of the male order. |
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She said businesses and social entrepreneurs all had their role to play in inner city regeneration. |
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About a third of the total area will be set aside for natural regeneration of broadleaf trees such as oak, rowan and birch. |
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All biopsies showed evidence of muscle fiber degeneration and regeneration. |
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The main justification for the use of compulsory purchase powers here would be to achieve a comprehensive regeneration scheme. |
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In Germany the trial was an essential cathartic process crucial to post-war regeneration. |
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Modern household softeners have an automatic backwash or regeneration cycle to clean off the salt and allow it to resume its task. |
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This regeneration and instauration of the sciences is with justice due to the age of a prince surpassing all others in wisdom and learning. |
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Suddenly, alarms wail and lights start flashing all around the regeneration cylinders! |
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It will also contribute to the economic and social regeneration of Mayo and the north-west region and to sustainable development of the area. |
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Symbols of erection, penetration, and prodigious sexual potency and regeneration are everywhere. |
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The increased availability of fuelwood and tree leaves for fodder are key benefits of forest regeneration. |
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It added that they helped regeneration, keeping schools open and providing custom to shops. |
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The project is funded by a four year grant from regeneration money provided by the government. |
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The Forest Service enacted regulations to force lumber companies to practice enough silviculture to ensure regeneration in the cutover lands. |
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Reproduction gas lamps and tree-lined pavements are only a part of the Council's regeneration scheme. |
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But money from regeneration schemes often end up prettifying some parts of a city, while more deprived areas are left to rot. |
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So Dr. Schwab, in fact, wrote me and said that I'm a prime candidate for regeneration and recovery. |
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Continuous deionizers, mainly used in labs for polishing, do not require regeneration. |
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On the credit side Russia has been brought back into the fold of the international community and in the Balkans the process of resettlement and regeneration goes on apace. |
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There are also benefits with regeneration of disadvantaged areas. |
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Welcome though this urban regeneration will be, now is probably your last chance to spot a kingfisher down by Bow Bridge, before the property sharks move in. |
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Other studies have addressed the role of gaps, and especially large gaps in providing the habitat necessary for the regeneration of shade intolerant species. |
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Gaps in this wetland function similarly to those studied in a variety of upland forest types, by serving as sites of regeneration for intolerant species. |
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The 15th century represents a low point for the Latinate tradition, but it revives in the 16th century under the impact of humanism and the regeneration of the universities. |
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Through his continued application of georgic strategies, he is returned to a truly Virgilian sense of the extreme volatility of the labor of imperial regeneration. |
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Thus, the first key step in this morphallactic regeneration, when the head region is removed, is the specification of a new head region at the cut surface. |
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The result was excellent regeneration of tissue inside the spheres, which were then degraded and disappeared, and there were no signs of rejection. |
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Grapefruit, bananas and cloves will soon be growing in Sheffield as the next phase of the regeneration of the city's Botanical Gardens nears completion. |
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The research team reckons the discovery will have implications for work on stems cells, tissue regeneration, elderly care and spinal cord injuries. |
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The new patch could eventually be used as an alternative to the current implant materials that have no capacity for growth or tissue regeneration. |
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Hair follicle regeneration recapitulates embryonic development. |
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When an axon is cut the neurilemma forms a regeneration tube. |
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In Hydra, regeneration is morphallactic since cell division is unnecessary and a complete Hydra can be regenerated from a piece of the body column. |
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It does this by integrating natural processes such as nutrient cycling, nitrogen fixation, soil regeneration and natural enemies of pests into food production processes. |
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Changes in the structure and ultrastructure of protoplasts during regeneration of the cell wall, mitotic cell division and amitotic nuclear fragmentation. |
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Larval salamanders are favorites for doing research on regeneration. |
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Outstanding natural havens, as well as rivers, forests, wetlands, deserts and endangered species, all demand immediate regeneration and protection. |
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The focus of this research is on separation and regeneration of the catalysts in order to decrease costs of production while increasing the purity of the product. |
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Every July student interns come to TFI to research everything from the improving water quality of local streams to using ants as indicator species for forest regeneration. |
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Federal fisheries officials were committed to the restoration of the commercial fishery by rebuilding stocks of lake trout until natural regeneration took place. |
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Just as the land provides the nutrients that ensures a yam's regermination, so too does it provide the basis of the ancestral regeneration of the matriline. |
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The regeneration of al Qaeda in Iraq and its expansion into Syria is a warning to American decision makers. |
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She then takes cells that receive the new gene and puts them onto a regeneration medium containing various additives, such as nutrients and growth regulators. |
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The Guardian's pull-out survey on housing regeneration, from 24 September. |
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When Smithfield's 400,000 cobblestones were being lifted, cleaned and relaid by hand as part of regeneration, the fair temporarily relocated to Grangegorman. |
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Our group has also successfully demonstrated that the gel mixture of collagen, laminin and fibronectin could offer a suitable growth medium for the regeneration of axons. |
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Local retailers will be looking to residents to help them over the hump so that everyone can be part of the bright new future this regeneration will bring. |
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The old heart of the city is earmarked for major regeneration. |
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But ironically the former slum houses are now sought-after properties following regeneration and the flats have become increasingly unpopular with residents. |
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But a decision to sell off its shopping centre interest would be a major surprise as it gives the council a huge bargaining chip in negotiations over town-centre regeneration. |
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The assistant professor of chemical engineering is getting recognition for her research into biodegradable polymer materials that could aid nerve regeneration. |
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The powers of healing or regeneration vary from one tissue to another. |
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In addition, a simple and efficient in vitro regeneration bioassay was developed for the preliminary screening of transgenic lines against a pathogenic fungus. |
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Other spinal cord regeneration efforts involve using stem cells to regrow damaged or lost neurons. |
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Housing chiefs have earmarked five locations where existing property could be demolished for redevelopments to house residents displaced by the regeneration project. |
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The Council should be commended for starting the ball rolling on Bingley's regeneration and urged to pressure the new owners of the shopping precinct for speedy action. |
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The Johannesburg council, however, plans to evict the squatters so that the building can be revamped as part of its inner city regeneration programme. |
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The charred shell of this once-fine building has for too long been a blot on the landscape, holding back the regeneration of the streets around it. |
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The understory data for intact forests matches the regeneration we recorded in blowdowns very closely, suggesting that blowdowns leave the understory undamaged. |
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Subsidising industry, designating enterprise zones, new towns or regeneration areas, creating an SDA or a Scottish Enterprise certainly changes the economic landscape. |
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The crowning glory of the regeneration group's work has been the huge success of the Market House which has been developed to offer a wide range of community facilities. |
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They then hoe the ground in patches at a prescribed spacing and broad-cast the seed collected from other forests to ensure natural regeneration to a desired extent. |
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It is important to note here a major difference in morphology affecting regeneration in cheilostomes and cyclostome Bryozoa, such as those described by Ostrovsky. |
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In this study we have focused on the regeneration of the reduced form of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide in the cell due to its key role in cellular metabolism. |
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With the clock ticking, regeneration bosses have reiterated promises of support to help inexperienced organisations draw up strong applications to access the funds. |
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This also involved the villagers taking on the responsibility of monitoring the key indicator species to understand how the regeneration process was taking place. |
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In planarian regeneration, they could be instrumental to transforming the homogeneous blastema and postblastema fields into discrete patterned regions. |
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That capacity for regeneration means that the cerebral wiring for our own store of knowledge and memories, which grows as we do, is as unique as a thumbprint. |
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Some information has been gathered on the expression of transcription factors associated with segmentation and regeneration in oligochaete annelids. |
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It's a sad truth that he was axed from the goggle-box over fifteen years ago, but that hasn't stopped the die-hard 'Whovians' from mounting a campaign for his regeneration. |
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Work can start on the Au100 million regeneration of a former Forest of Dean mining area after plans were approved for the project on 14 November. |
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The creation of Cardiff Bay is now widely regarded as one of the most successful regeneration projects in the United Kingdom. |
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The decision considers carrying capacity, regeneration rates and future values. |
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After regeneration is complete, the tube is gradually resorbed into the body. |
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In some species, the tail is capable of regeneration if a part is broken off. |
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Histological observations and regeneration of barbles in juveniles of the Chinese Longsnout catfish Leiocassis longirostris. |
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They give him a potion that will let him pick his next regeneration. |
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The remaining whales of the Greenland Sea has been protected ever since, but the populations had not shown any proof of significant regeneration. |
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Sanisal P germ-reducing regeneration tablets improve microbiological safety for water softeners. |
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A grant given to Sandown and Ryde in 2015 has raised hopes of regeneration within the town. |
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With the homeobox gene Smed-prep, we have characterised the first gene necessary for correct anterior fate and patterning during regeneration. |
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I shall have no peace of mind until I have planted a seed of Nordic blood wherever the population stand in need of regeneration. |
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Both House and Eisenberg mentioned institute experiments with hair cell regeneration. |
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The flatworms known as planaria have long amazed scientists with their capacity for regeneration. |
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The resulting prothalli were used as the third type of explants for gametophyte regeneration. |
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Passive regeneration takes place automatically on motorway or fast A-road runs when the exhaust temperature is high. |
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This is followed by spiritual regeneration, which returns the believer to the state of holiness before Adam's transgression. |
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The lack of regeneration has been attributed to a blockage from scar tissue that forms as the lesion. |
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Laminin is an extracellular matrix protein for Schwann cell adhesion, critical for nerve regeneration. |
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The role of biodegradable engineered scaffolds seeded with Schwann cells for spinal cord regeneration. |
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The Theatines undertook checking the spread of heresy and contributed to a regeneration of the clergy. |
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South Shields Market will take place in the north half of the market place on Monday after regeneration work was completed. |
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Street artist and muralist Phil Lynch is producing a mural for the entire length of the hoardings on the theme of regeneration and growth. |
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References to baptismal regeneration were modified in accordance with evangelical views, as were the services of Ordination and Marriage. |
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Initially, it was thought that regeneration of cardiac myocytes did not occur. |
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The rats were narcotised and treated for induction of muscle regeneration as in Zador et al. |
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The arrival of Crossrail in 2018 is expected to further stimulate regeneration, especially in the area close to Woolwich Crossrail station. |
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In neurocytes, Apo E expression correlates with the promotion of nerve protective action, and regeneration of injured neurocytes. |
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Among them hydroxyapatite is most commonly used in stomatology and orthopaedics for bone replacement and regeneration. |
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Effects of neurolytic celiac plexus block on liver regeneration in rats with partial hepatectomy. |
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A metathesis reaction of aromatic disulphides, which naturally exchange at room temperature, causes the regeneration. |
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Cell division is necessary for most forms of regeneration and blocking it by destabilizing microtubules will lead to a lack of regeneration. |
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The conversion of so many old industrial buildings into living quarters was a major factor in the regeneration. |
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It is for this reason that the Declaration of Principles denies that regeneration is inseparably connected with baptism. |
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Had there not been a degeneration from what God made us at first, there had been no need of a regeneration to reestate us in it. |
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Upflow regeneration allows up to 24 percent higher capacity at the same salt dosage when compared to down flow systems. |
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Middleton BA Hydrochory, seed banks, and regeneration dynamics along the landscape boundaries of a forested wetland. |
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Species and cultivars vary in when they should be cut, regeneration times and other factors. |
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Its active substance is released and enters the water softener during regeneration, where it kills any germs which may be present. |
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Comparative expression profiling reveals an essential role for Raldh2 in epimorphic regeneration. |
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The borough council's environment and regeneration unit has applied for planning consent for the floodlit facilities at the Alder Lane park. |
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There are plans to rebuild it as a key part of the regeneration of the city centre. |
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The presented bicomposite material managed to provide an microenvironment that altered the default healing response towards regeneration. |
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These include economic development and regeneration, emergency planning, tourism promotion and coastal protection. |
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Grazing in this manner is one of the main factors preventing the natural regeneration of forests across many regions of the country. |
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At the end of the 20th century Liverpool was concentrating on regeneration, a process which continues today. |
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In recent years, many parts of Liverpool's city centre have undergone significant redevelopment and regeneration after years of decline. |
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Eye in the Door, The Ghost Road, and regeneration, all by Pat Barker. |
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Tony Hsieh is a rockstar software developer who's turning his attention to urban regeneration in Las Vegas. |
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Recent developments include the regeneration of Ballymun and an urban extension of Dublin at Adamstown. |
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The OCT Association also provides overseas territories with structural funding for regeneration projects. |
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Additionally, Belfast city centre has undergone considerable expansion and regeneration in recent years, notably around Victoria Square. |
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The first stage of regeneration involved improving the city centre road network, including turning Kingsway and Queensway into boulevards. |
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A seedling stand can be created by planting, sowing, or natural regeneration. |
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A range of projects are being delivered to assist in the regeneration of the town centre. |
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There are also proposals to support the regeneration of the western neighbourhoods, centered around the Glenwood centre. |
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The former cattle market in the heart of the town has undergone regeneration. |
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Morality plays were supposed to show not only the fall but also the regeneration of the central character, Mankind. |
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Chemotropic guidance facilitates axonal regeneration and synapse formation after spinal cord injury. |
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Charles is patron of the Mihai Eminescu Trust, a Romanian conservation and regeneration organisation, and has purchased a house in Romania. |
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Producers introduced the concept of regeneration to permit the recasting of the main character. |
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In Time and the Rani, Sylvester McCoy briefly played the Sixth Doctor during the regeneration sequence, carrying on as the Seventh. |
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Nowadays the canals are mainly used for leisure purposes, and canalside regeneration schemes such as Brindleyplace have turned the canals into tourist attractions. |
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As part of the city's regeneration, a new bus station has been constructed in Hanley, allowing the old one to be demolished, making room for further redevelopment. |
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Since 2014, renewed focus has been given to urban regeneration and renewal, especially in areas directly bordering the city centre, such as Frederik Hendrikbuurt. |
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Nonthermal ultrasound and exercise in skeletal muscle regeneration. |
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The West Indian brittle star, Ophiocomella ophiactoides, frequently undergoes asexual reproduction by fission of the disk with subsequent regeneration of the arms. |
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Although revolutionary for its time, the town centre is showing signs of age and in 2005 plans were revealed for a major regeneration to take place over the next decade. |
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To start with,' he says, 'we need better management of tropical rainforests and large-scale protection, regeneration and reafforestation programs. |
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Such implants have value as a brain-protecting material, says Jeremy Mao, codirector of Columbia University's center for craniofacial regeneration. |
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Further regeneration is centred on Hare Street and the Riverside. |
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The Games formed the catalyst for the widespread regeneration and heavy development of Manchester, and bolstered its reputation as a European and global city internationally. |
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In such systems the metal centre transfers an oxide ligand to the organic compound followed by regeneration of the metal oxide, often by oxygen in air. |
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Next month a Town Centre Partnership will be launched at a time when the city is consulting on a new regeneration framework which will shape the town over two decades. |
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Arsenic inhibits myogenic differentiation and muscle regeneration. |
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Spurred by the investment after the 1996 bomb, and aided by the XVII Commonwealth Games, Manchester's city centre has undergone extensive regeneration. |
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The show introduced the Time Lords' ability to change sexes on regeneration in earlier episodes, first in dialogue, then with Michelle Gomez's version of The Master. |
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The area had declined dramatically by 1990, but has since been improved by a series of regeneration projects that have brought in major investment. |
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Other major developments include the regeneration of the Titanic Quarter, and the erection of the Obel Tower, a skyscraper set to be the tallest tower on the island. |
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Incretins have been cited in causing regeneration of pancreatic insulin secreting cells, and in tissue protective properties including protection of the heart. |
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A TIGER economy across the Tees Valley is helping deliver a change in the way people see the area, says a leading player in the regeneration projects. |
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As part of the wider regeneration along the banks of the River Clyde a Bus Rapid Transit system called Clyde Fastlink is currently under construction. |
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It has an area of 50 hectares and has been fenced off for an initial period of 15 years to encourage natural regeneration and keep out grazing animals. |
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Last year, Compamed featured the European project ArtiVasc 3D, which focuses on 3-D printed, artificial vascularized scaffolds for tissue regeneration. |
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He will support other key urban regeneration projects across the area, including the redevelopment of Northampton s Waterside and Castle Railway Station. |
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We recently reported that larval sea stars are capable of complete regeneration of missing body parts, providing a new deuterostome model for the study of regeneration. |
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We believe EBRD brings more than just financing to the Abdali Mall project including a vision to support developers who introduce urban regeneration projects. |
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If sporophyte regeneration persistently fails, check that regeneration conditions are correct and ensure that plates are being sealed with parafilm. |
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The steam cycle is conventional with reheat and regeneration. |
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Objective 1 investment in regeneration and public realm improvements have led to the pedestrianisation of the town centre and the restoration of some buildings. |
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Recent studies have reported that the role of VEGF in the early angiogenic processes is associated with postmenstrual regeneration of the endometrium. |
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A new biological study will use flatworms as a model organism to see how gravity affects tissue regeneration and the rebuilding of damaged organs and nerves. |
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The River Ribble catchment is covered by the Mersey Basin Campaign, a partnership which was established in 1985 to improve water quality and encourage waterside regeneration. |
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New process control of the dryer's rotary desiccant container can also reduce time for the regeneration of the drying agent, cutting energy consumption. |
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Southport's Cycling Towns programme aims to encourage tourism and leisure cycling, create regeneration opportunities and significantly increase cycling to school. |
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The ambitious plan will see 141 hectares of the city centre transformed as part of what is one of the biggest urban regeneration schemes in Britain. |
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The process of urban regeneration has been rapid, and accompanied by a greatly increased international reputation of the city as a tourist destination. |
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Growth has been supported by inward investment from European and United Kingdom government funding which has impacted on the regeneration of the area. |
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The higher task is now ours of the regeneration of the race, or, if we wish to express that betterment less questionably, the aggeneration of the race. |
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This is a key element of our mission to develop both cell therapy products and pharmaceuticals for the regeneration of damaged connective tissues. |
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As shown in the inset, the Rct values for the bioelectrode both before and after regeneration were found to be the same, with negligible differences. |
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The mine which was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II in 1957 was promoted as being a key driver in the economic regeneration of central Fife. |
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These processes are critical in ecosystems and influence plant regeneration, habitat structure for biota, and seed resources available to granivores. |
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These proposals for greenbelt development MUST be thrown out and replaced by positive, sustainable proposals for urban regeneration and brownfield development. |
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