| The next nine songs are from the artier and almost monophonically recorded album, which sought to replicate the chaos of their live performances. |
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| Constructive, virtual training simulations and simulators should replicate the threat realistically. |
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| Like all viruses, poxviruses co-opt various cellular molecules and processes to enter a cell, replicate and then spread to uninfected cells. |
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| Can you replicate this model so it can be exportable and usable by other institutions in other settings? |
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| Perhaps they replicate each other and work together on occasion, but their roles are different. |
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| It was hoped the gene would be absorbed by the brain and eventually replicate itself. |
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| With this deletion, the chimeric virus was less able to replicate itself when injected into the monkeys. |
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| A single egg cell replicates itself, and the offspring cells in turn replicate themselves, and so on. |
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| Moreover, arginine makes it possible for the herpes virus to replicate itself, so if you're troubled by frequent cold sores, give it a pass. |
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| The foregoing simulation simply assumes that the trials replicate themselves based on what works. |
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| A kit-car hobby turns into a venture, as Klick retrofits Pontiacs with fiberglass bodies to replicate European sports cars. |
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| At any given time interval, the exudate collected from individual plants never contributed to more than one replicate. |
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| Cut glass, rhinestones, and cubic zirconium are all attempts to replicate the beauty of diamonds at a lower cost. |
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| Parts made from this material replicate polypropylene tensile strength and elongation at yield, and stuck in the elongation direction. |
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| The celebrated grande dame of Hindi letters is very individual, very stylised, very hard to replicate in another language. |
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| I muttered under my breath, my almond shaped eyes rounding to replicate saucers. |
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| On tape day, Dean would come in, watch a run-through with the stand-in, then go out and replicate the stand-in's actions. |
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| Indulging your atavistic selfish-gene impulse to replicate is neither rational nor moral. |
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| He says by creating drugs to replicate the effect, it will take longer for the accumulative damage caused by free radicals to occur. |
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| Research shows that the measurements, properly weighted, can replicate the impact of horses' hooves on the ground. |
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| Since then, I've longed to replicate the delicious, savory, and often quite filling meals that we ate together. |
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| Document management technologies include digital imaging, which uses scanners to digitally replicate documents. |
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| Each individual replicate was desiccated separately in its own sterile jar containing a single plastic float above the saturated salt solution. |
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| Escorts, which has joint ventures in the US and Poland, will replicate the same model for the Chinese market. |
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| We used a feature in both backup apps to simply replicate the folder, so that compression overhead wasn't a factor. |
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| Suitable vectors are the DNAs of bacterial viruses or bacteriophages which naturally infect bacteria and replicate within them. |
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| Still, with the movie ringing up millions in the domestic market, local film-makers are scrabbling to replicate its success. |
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| Upon exhumation, we examined each replicate for germinants, rotted seeds, and whole firm seeds, which we tested for viability with tetrazolium. |
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| Two of the best selling fabric-effect tiles are linen and satin, both of which successfully replicate the look and texture of the fabrics. |
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| In this system, viruses replicate faster, achieve higher titres, and deplete thymocytes better than their unmutated counterparts. |
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| First is the editorial decision to replicate the original printings, complete with long walls of paragraphs and confusing punctuation. |
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| Chlamydiae are Gram-negative eubacteria that replicate strictly inside eukaryotic cells. |
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| For each replicate, the first sweep of a beneficial mutation was identified using genetic markers. |
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| Each model is unique, and individually disassembled, cut, melted, filed, smashed, then reassembled to replicate a real fender bender. |
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| Introducing judicial recalls will simply replicate this seventeenth century problem, only with the people in the place of the king. |
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| These replicate the sheaths that, like the insulation around a bundle of electrical wires, surround nerves in the body. |
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| Phrased differently, current selective pressures on the dogs do not replicate pre-colonial circumstances. |
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| The choice of x genes and y taxa approaches true randomness as the binomial coefficient increases relative to replicate number. |
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| This softness seems in part to be intentional in order to replicate the grainy news and other stock footage which is occasionally spliced in. |
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| At their core, the four examples represent efforts to replicate or set aside parcels of a pre-colonial lower Mississippi River delta environment. |
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| He followed this achievement by showing how poxviruses express their genes and replicate their DNA in host cells. |
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| That's not to say it's a total success, it is a little camp and so doesn't quite replicate the dreadfulness of the novel. |
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| Then there is the ability to produce more unusually shaped pieces which traditional fretsaws or even laser cutting machines cannot replicate. |
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| The objective is to replicate Folsom points using equipment made only of materials available to hunters 10,000 years ago. |
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| This is the operation he will later replicate at home, without crediting or namechecking its inventors. |
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| Stem cells are unspecialised cells that are able to replicate and can be influenced by their environment to take on specialised properties. |
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| The camerawork and claustrophobic atmosphere are designed to externally replicate his mental state. |
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| Fortunately, computers that completely replicate human taste, discernment, and creativity have yet to be developed. |
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| This small piece of software uses computer networks and security holds to replicate itself. |
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| Sculptor Charles Long showed a wonderful portfolio of Iris prints that seemed to replicate a notebook. |
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| In the mixed model used to assess significance, the observed error among replicate measures was incorporated for each gene individually. |
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| An initiative targeting wildlife sanctuaries cutting across international boundaries hopes to replicate this success elsewhere. |
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| The ability of DNA polymerases to replicate DNA requires a number of additional accessory proteins. |
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| This paper presents a representation system for maintaining interacting durative states to replicate realistic emotional control. |
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| If you're not intimately familiar with Indian vegetarian cooking, it's too easy to order dishes that closely replicate each other. |
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| The movie calculatedly attempts to replicate the things that made the original successful, and fails. |
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| Despite the commercial viability of both genres, he has had no desire to replicate harmolodics any more than straightforward bebop. |
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| We collected and synchronously hatched eggs from each replicate line and subjected resulting larvae to the next generation of culling. |
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| At another level, it could not help but replicate these earlier characterizations of degenerate families. |
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| In fact, these failures to replicate provide suggestive evidence on the conditions under which the interaction will or will not appear. |
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| The two chewed the cud and decided to replicate the success of an existing internet company but with a different business model. |
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| The Chilean artist, who works in Mexico City, offered small framed stitched objects that painstakingly replicate fragments of his own clothing. |
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| Removal of sialic acid enables a virus to enter a host cell to replicate as well as to exit the host cell. |
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| There is, however, a way to replicate that success while acting against price fixing. |
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| You've got a synthesizer that can basically replicate every single sound in the world. |
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| I found the setup guide on the website extremely clear and easy to follow, so haven't tried to replicate it here. |
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| Can you afford to replicate a clustered production environment for development and testing environments? |
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| When a virus enters and infects a cell, it sheds this protective coat so that the genetic material can replicate new viruses. |
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| He pestered his mother for a piano, and soon was trying to replicate the sound on a tiny Casio keyboard. |
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| When the students played along with the artist's melody while following the piano roll score, they were able to replicate timing and dynamics. |
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| Germany was hoping to replicate the successful American example when it opened its doors earlier this year to overseas infotech professionals. |
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| Ideally we would want to replicate the in vivo conditions and mimic the outcome of nuclear division in vivo. |
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| Retroviruses such as HIV must integrate into the human cell's DNA in order to replicate. |
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| When the journal Nature sent a team of invigilators to the laboratory, he was unable to replicate his findings. |
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| It does not replicate or expand on the programmes, but offers an account of the century to serve as a background, or context, for them. |
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| So don't just xerox every page and try to perfectly replicate every single example. |
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| In another plaque, Prussian blue pigment, meant to replicate copper corrosion, obscures much of the surface. |
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| She does idealize the island, at times, particularly as her characters try to replicate island culture within their mainland barrios. |
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| Then, in 2013, Ai used precious jade to replicate the handcuffs that confined him to his chair during his 2011 imprisonment. |
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| Stars and galaxies go through the life cycle of birth, growth, death, and replicate themselves. |
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| If the Westphalians are able to replicate that performance and add a bit more efficiency up front, they should return with three points in the bag. |
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| A total of 18,000 hand-blown glass panes made in Germany to replicate the original glazing of 1836 have been placed by specialist glaziers between the bars. |
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| Students were asked to replicate select phrases of the performances while following the piano roll graph, either melody or accompaniment alone or both together. |
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| Briefly, four replicate 25 m diameter toroidal plenum rings constructed from 0.305 m diameter pipe were placed in the field shortly after planting. |
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| Watch how your hair is styled, what products are used, what kind of brushes, rollers, or styling irons your hairdresser uses so that you can replicate the look yourself. |
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| Worship must reflect the culture of the community that is currently part of the church, not replicate current worship CDs, nor 1980s soft rock, nor 18th century hymns. |
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| One wonders if the same will happen to other lines of research, such as attempts to replicate, extend, and understand the correlations between ESP and geomagnetism. |
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| So, Messrs. Gramm and Hubbard, sure, by all means, let's replicate what Reagan did. |
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| It is no concern of the author that their readers might attempt to replicate a way of life that does not exist, or be disappointed when they fail to do so. |
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| One or more, and in some cases all five, nematode replicate lines showed declines in virulence, reproduction, heat tolerance, host seeking ability, and nictation. |
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| The medical team has been rehearsing the operation using life-size models which not only replicate the babies blood vessels, but show their veins. |
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| The choice of marble colours is extremely wide and the smoothness of the stone, coupled with natural veining, creates an effect no man-made material can ever replicate. |
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| The effect of noise means that we can never exactly replicate our data. |
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| After a bit of experimentation, I was able to replicate the effect using two bottles of spice from my kitchen, a loose-leaf notebook, and a piece of cardboard. |
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| While the FDA shares concerns about safety, some insiders argue that scientific advancements have made it easier to characterize and replicate biologics. |
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| Further research is needed to replicate and extend the current findings about adolescent suicide, using expanded samples of personal documents and other methodologies. |
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| The sounds she performs from the violins on canvas replicate her idea of sounds found in the cosmos. |
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| By 2011, airbus was working on a program to replicate these conditions in a flight simulator for use in pilot training. |
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| Bootstrap and jackknife analyses were performed under the MP criterion, with equal weights for all positions and two random additions of sequences for 200 replicate searches. |
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| This is of particular importance since the surviving imperial portraits are copies that replicate officially sanctioned prototypes with varying degrees of fidelity and skill. |
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| The environment was one Coutts wholeheartedly relished, however, and it is one which she would dearly love to replicate in miniature at grassroots level. |
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| Later European languages, in admiration of Greek and Roman poetry with their quantitative meters, have often tried to replicate the musical character of ancient verse. |
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| Once you've decided on a shape, make short, light, upward feathery strokes with a soft, well-sharpened pencil to replicate the natural brow hairs. |
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| Both Townsend and Logan are streaky kickers, while Hodge's attempts to replicate his Reivers form in a Scotland shirt have been worryingly fitful. |
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| Like the AIDS virus, it uses RNA and not DNA to replicate itself. |
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| But when Diener announced his discovery, he was overturning scientific dogma that held that an organism with no proteins couldn't replicate itself. |
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| Pac may not be as verbose as other rappers of his time, but his flow is intricate, and complicated to replicate. |
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| Mostly the effects and material were taken from the theatre where a metal sheet would replicate thunder and a hard board against another would give the illusion of gunshots. |
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| In contrast, a batch of discs can take two to four weeks to replicate. |
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| By this manipulation the virus is able to replicate along with its host cell, while keeping itself fairly well hidden from immunologic surveillance. |
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| But when Diener announced his discovery, he was overturning the scientific dogma that held that an organism with no proteins wasn't supposed to be able to replicate itself. |
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| It works on strict adherence to the scientific method, through double-blind studies, good lab practices, etc. and the ability to replicate results. |
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| Future research needs to replicate these findings with arrestees in other cities and with other criminal justice populations, such as parolees and probationers. |
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| Old pewter develops a patina or film of thin oxide which is difficult to replicate, and this type of oxidation is one of the things collectors look for to confirm age. |
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| Fortunately, combat arms units have means available to replicate and introduce men to the fear, anxiety, and adrenaline associated with closing with and destroying the enemy. |
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| More mainstream retailers found the checkout system difficult to replicate and, Miles said, worried that most shoppers were not ready for such a leap. |
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| By deactivating genes used by the virus to replicate, researchers could halt an infection in its tracks. |
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| While in Paris, however, Priestley managed to replicate the experiment for others, including French chemist Antoine Lavoisier. |
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| All he had to do was replicate his near-indecipherable microscript, originally developed in response to an acute paper shortage. |
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| Forward Wales, with a less militant programme, aimed to replicate their success. |
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| Future prime ministers may struggle to replicate the sort of muscular countrywide support that Modi was able to earn. |
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| The brothers attempted to assemble a live stage band that could replicate their studio sound. |
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| More recently, however, this claim has come under strong criticism with repeated failures to replicate. |
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| Experimental studies attempting to duplicate this effect have been unable to replicate the supposed injuries, casting doubt on this idea. |
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| Later experimenters could not replicate the discovery, and it was dismissed as an error for many years. |
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| Projects attempted to replicate the protective characteristics of natural beach and dune systems. |
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| Other researchers reported in 2011 that they could not replicate those findings using different Google Earth images. |
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| After the publication of these findings, other attempts to replicate the experiments were carried out. |
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| In a series of 35 studies, they were unable to replicate the results so investigated the procedure of the original experiments. |
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| Uruguay is divided into 19 departments whose local administrations replicate the division of the executive and legislative powers. |
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| Many unique dishes resulted from the spice blends that the wives of Portuguese sailors used in an attempt to replicate European dishes. |
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| Poxviruses are unique among DNA viruses in that they replicate in the cytoplasm of the cell rather than in the nucleus. |
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| Petersburg, hoping to replicate the scientific culture of Europe in his own land and to educate native scholars. |
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| However, in 2011, a group of Czech researchers reported their failed attempt to replicate the finding using Google Earth images. |
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| They are used in repair of Airstream trailers to replicate the look of the original rivets. |
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| To honor the spirits that take form as mountains, the Inca stoneworkers carved rock outcrops to replicate their shapes. |
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| There was supposed to be a writable version, too, but the primary business model was to replicate and distribute prerecorded music. |
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| GeneMarker software incorporates a consolidated replicate comparison tool to be used in ecology, agricultural and clinical research. |
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| One of the schools will be Triumph Academy in the Valley, which will replicate Lakeview and Community Charter. |
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| Most viruses only replicate, though many do a large amount of damage as well. |
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| Finding craftsmen to replicate this lost turn-of-the-century art form was an obstacle, since so few ceilings of this type remain today. |
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| Method quantitation limits were determined from replicate analysis of the sample 2B leachate. |
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| Thus, replicates did not behave the same from replicate to replicate within the devices. |
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| It appears to be dispensable for viral RNA replication, as replicons lacking the p7 gene replicate or make viral RNA efficiently. |
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| They are now trying to replicate the Amazon Hope healthcare model on Lake Victoria in Tanzania. |
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| The pop star will also launch a signature line of beauty products with the firm so that her fans can replicate her style. |
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| Prions, before neuroinvasion, are assumed to replicate in the lymphoreticular tissue. |
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| A low budget TV drama can't replicate the genuine messiness of real people's lives. |
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| The midguts from 20 larvae were used as one replicate, and 3 replicates were prepared. |
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| Telomeres are small regions found at the end of chromosomes that shorten as cells within the body replicate. |
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| He because slick Down are in a strong position under boss Mark Turley as they look to replicate their 1999 success. |
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| Next they will make provisional teeth using a matrix supplied by the laboratory which will replicate the wax mock-up. |
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| The first brand in this series is Shock Top Campfire Wheat, a beer designed to replicate that old camp sensation, S'Mores. |
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| Designed to replicate restaurant favourites like Sticky Peking BBQ Ribs, Sticky Teriyaki Chicken Wings, Sticky Char Siu Pork Ribs. |
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| Importantly, Trojan horses do not replicate or have any mechanism of spreading themselves. |
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| A standard replication method was then used to replicate colony growth and the tryptic soy agar plates were then infused with antibiotics. |
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| This enables the supercoil to relax, at which point the enzyme repairs the nick and detaches, leaving the DNA able to replicate. |
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| Despite their dramatic effect in the caterpillar, these viruses, in a family called polydnaviruses, can't replicate there. |
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| But it will not attempt to replicate its search-and-rescue mission. |
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| The facility also houses a Phytotron with growth chambers that can replicate any growing condition for plants, from the rainforest to desert. |
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| There's no comparison in grandeur between such pip-squeak arcs and the mighty solar prominences that Bellan is trying to replicate. |
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| After feeding, the algal concentration was counted with 3 replicate counts using a hemocytometer viewed under a microscope. |
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| Like the popover racks I had to have so that I could replicate the Adair Inn's amazing popovers served with breakfast every morning. |
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| Poxviruses replicate in the host cytoplasm using a processive polymerase composed of several viral proteins. |
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| Cases tell the story in a way that hornbooks, treatises and other narrative secondary sources simply can't replicate. |
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| The HIV genome does not replicate episomally, but depends on integration into the host genome for replication. |
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| Using additional fillers and pigments in the epoxies, Deep South Divers were able to develop methods and procedures to replicate existing textured underwater surfaces. |
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| McGue's findings replicate a twin study conducted in the 1970s, notes psychologist Henri Begleiter of the State University of New York Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn. |
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| After a one-week adaptation period, six laying hens with similar live weights from each replicate were killed by intracardial injection of sodium pentobarbitone. |
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| Finally, custom gobos replicate the stained glass effect during night hours and cast multi-colored light on the crucifix in certain preset lighting scenes. |
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| To address this question a series of experimental charrings were carried out on modern specimens in a laboratory kiln in an attempt to replicate the archaeological material. |
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| Two birds from each replicate were randomly selected on day 21, weighed, and slaughtered by cervical dislocation, to measure the weight of visceral organs. |
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| For juniper, isovaleric acid was detected in the second replicate but not the first, while valeric acid was detected in the first but not the second. |
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| Syncytial tumors feature cells that replicate the normal appearance of arachnoid cap cells, and they contain prominent cellular whorls and nodules. |
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| The Storm window and door range offer all the aesthetics of timber, a window designed to replicate period features, that are normally only found with traditional joinery. |
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| By extension, then, those women who experienced the stigmata were able to replicate this maternal Jesus role by allowing Christ's blood to flow through them to nurture others. |
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| I can't hope to replicate the rigor of her arguments against neo-Darwinism, but I can suggest, with a couple final quotations, what distinguishes her thought. |
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| Certain DNA elements such as transposons, fragments of DNA that replicate within an organism's genome, can however disrupt this functioning and disable genes. |
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| In those far-off days, the equipment was limited to one microphone, one cassette recorder and a copier which could replicate only one cassette at a time. |
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| To evaluate knockdown performance, a whip density evaluation, mixing the coating media in a Mixmaster, can replicate shear in an open-headed vessel. |
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| It's much closer to mathematized superstition, organized superstition, which has a priesthood to replicate on the basis of how well we learn the rituals. |
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| It may be difficult to replicate this shape in such cases as micrognathia or acromegaly with macroglossia to the fixed curvature of a device with an in-built conduit. |
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| Others are not designed to do any damage but simply to replicate themselves or make their presence known by presenting text, video, or audio messages. |
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| Moreover, we believe that the point of life is not only to repeat these great experiences in our own lives but to also replicate them in the lives of others. |
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| The team found that assassin bugs plucked the web's silk threads that replicate the vibrations of a fly or other insect, causing the fooled spider to head towards the bug. |
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| Most zoos or wildlife parks across the world usually try to replicate animals' natural habitat as best they can for the sake of the animals' wellbeing. |
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| In the 13th and 14th centuries the Merinids held power in Morocco and strove to replicate the successes of the Almohads by military campaigns in Algeria and Spain. |
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| However, the Great Mosque of Xi'an, whose current building dates from the 18th century, does not replicate the features often associated with mosques elsewhere. |
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| Group selection, if it occurs, acts on groups of organisms, on the assumption that groups replicate and mutate in an analogous way to genes and individuals. |
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| An example of selection occurring below the level of the individual organism are genes called transposons, which can replicate and spread throughout a genome. |
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| Those data are debatable, no one has been able to replicate them. |
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