The helm may be displayed either affronty or in profile, whichever better displays the crest. |
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It was Italian, with a crest on it embroidered with three lions inside the shield with two more lions holding up the logo. |
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The iliac crest is divided into four quarters, and the excursion or stage of maturity is designated as the amount of progression. |
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At Fonthill the crest and the thirty-six quarterings of Beckford's full coat-of-arms were blazoned on the carpets and painted glass windows. |
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Lancaster drew rein, tethering his horse in the thicket of pine just off the crest of the hill. |
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Sure enough, the flags waving high in the streets of the city bore the crest of Northwind, where Jessie's husband, Ben, was Duke. |
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The dark salmon-pink and grey plumage of the waxwing is topped off by an impressive crest. |
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We'd pulled the car up on the hills east of Rosedale and three yards the other side of the glass a cold wind quivered a lapwing's crest. |
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Right when we crest, that is the point we let off the throttle to lessen the impact and maintain control of the balance and pivot point. |
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I might as well be walking around with my college scarf, crest blazing, whistling a tune. |
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Oceanic crust is thus created from the mantle at the crest of the mid-ocean ridge system, a volcanic submarine rise. |
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Further up on the gable's crest are Vices and Death with a scythe at the very top. |
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Standing on the crest of the hill, illuminated against the morning sun, was a figure clothed in rippling blue-silver robes. |
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The hands of an intermediate rider move only about six to eight inches in front of the horse's withers in a short crest release. |
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It's a small, nondescript, red-brick building on a short street downtown, but the stone crest above the door tells most of the story. |
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The iliac apophysis ossifies in a predictable fashion from anterolateral to posteromedial along the iliac crest. |
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He rejoined us at the crest of the first ridge, where the wall leveled out and began a more gradual ascent to the peak. |
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Wu is riding a crest of support from recession-weary Hong Kong citizens who are looking for a white knight to lift their spirits. |
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There the long crest of the mountain broke sharply into a talus slope that, for the uppermost hundred meters, was almost a sheer cliff. |
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Pain is experienced between the posterior iliac crest and the gluteal fold, particularly in the vicinity of the sacroiliac joints. |
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This mechanical failure results in a topographic valley along the crest of the anticline. |
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They lack a sagittal crest, but prominent ridges often run along the parietals. |
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From the maps presented in Figure 2, it is apparent that the well tested the crest of an anticline that formed during the Cenozoic. |
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A gold crest graced the bottom, as did Mr. Coates' loopy, recognizable signature. |
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Finally, chairs with a scallop crest and sharply projecting ends, may have been a style peculiar to the Newbury region. |
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However, as the thrust sheets grow, the outer area of their anticlinal crest is extended. |
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In addition to communicating through song, larks will raise the crest of feathers in their head during agonistic and courtship displays. |
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My hair had grown out again and was sticking up off my scone like a parrot's crest. |
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His crest hung on the wooden wall, the black hawk with wings perched in a frightful pose staring at her with its piercing golden eyes. |
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She would rise early and wrap a thick cloak over her shoulders then proceed to watch as the sun drew itself over the crest of the hills yonder. |
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Also, a sagittal crest on the fossil Amblycoptus and Kordosia skulls has been reported. |
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There is little development of the lambdoidal crest but in some specimens it is slightly better developed than in others. |
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This crest mask represents a woman and is worn with a white mesh suit, which extends over the head of the masquerader. |
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A low sagittal crest extends from the supraorbital ridges to the parietal region. |
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The longest bony fish in the sea, it grows up to nine metres long with a bright red crest that runs the entire length of its body. |
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After an unusual lashing with the rough side of his tongue, Ian ordered Grant to post sentries every few yards along the crest of the hill. |
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In strode a tallish woman with the Captain's crest on the side of her uniform. |
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Secondary contributions were made by common bluff-base or crest trees, including elm, locust, and ash. |
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It is a scramble, but it's not difficult and, if the crest is too airy for you, it's easy enough to trace a less exposed route on the east side of the ridge. |
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The pronounced ridge, called a sagittal crest, on the skull that Ammann found in 1996 is thought to be formed to support large jaw muscles, an indication of large body size. |
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This was a pennon-shaped scarf of material, usually silk, lined with another colour, and placed on the helmet underneath the crest and crest wreath. |
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An arc of white light shone through the carefully planned refractors near its crest, making the Citadel look like an archer's bow drawn to the sky. |
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In this locality, the top 20 m of the Asmari Limestone exhibits palaeo-weathering along joints suggesting subaerial exposure of the Asmari near the crest of an anticline. |
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They had left the hamlet and circled to the far side of the hill before beginning their ascent, threading their way through rocks and scrub to the wood straddling the crest. |
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Trees were removed and 15 metres chopped off its crest to provide a level site for the eight prefabricated wrought-iron barracks that arrived from Australia. |
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Chairs imported from New England, particularly Boston, influenced the design of this chair, especially in its stretchers, relatively light seat rails, and yoked crest. |
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Police were called to deal with the marooned low-loader on Friday morning after it became jammed on the crest of the bridge over the Kennet and Avon canal at Staverton. |
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The cart stood exposed at the crest of a long rise in the road. |
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Instead it is a favorite of morning, a little brown-grey falcon, called the windhover because, hurling itself headlong into the wind, it rides on the crest of that wind. |
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This crest ascended more gently than the sides of the ridge, leading us to broader, more open country that rises steadily but not steeply toward the peak. |
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Sand grains are blown up the windward side of the heap and over the crest until the leeward side of the dune is so steep that it slumps under its own weight. |
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A leading Yorkshire independent school is dropping its Latin motto and centuries-old crest in favour of a multi-coloured star in a move that has angered traditionalists. |
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Unlike many larger terns, the Common Tern does not have a crest. |
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One of these occurred earlier this year when, at the very front of the field, gaining the crest of a hill, I caught sight of the hounds streaming up the opposite slope. |
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A crescentic dune with a star dune superimposed on its crest is the most common complex dune. |
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At Sandwich, Kent the Seabee seawall is buried at the back of the beach under the shingle with crest level at road kerb level. |
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Waves can also break if the wind grows strong enough to blow the crest off the base of the wave. |
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There is a clifftop walk from Jacob's Ladder along the crest of the gorge and back to the road, with views of the gorge. |
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Especially long hairs are on the shoulders, and almost form a crest on the upper part of the neck. |
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They have a white head and neck with a broad black stripe that extends from the eye to the black crest. |
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The crest is a Highland soldier, reflecting that the famous Black Watch were formed in the county. |
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The time when the crest of the wave reaches a port then gives the time of high water at the port. |
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In contrast, a weathered ridge is one with a rounded crest and with sides sloping at less than 40 degrees. |
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In addition several roads and highways crest the mountains over cols, or go through them via tunnels. |
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Peri handed Ptolemy his helmet. It had a crest on it, which she always thought looked quintessentially Roman. |
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The original arms had a portcullis as the main charge, which now forms the crest. |
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From this time onward, the Gilpin's crest included a sable boar on a gold background. |
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The line along the crest formed by the highest points, with the terrain dropping down on either side, is called the ridgeline. |
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The crest above the shield was the head of a ram of the local Herdwick breed. |
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A spur is a lateral ridge or tongue of land descending from a hill, mountain or main crest of a ridge. |
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The hinge of an anticline refers to the location where the curvature is greatest, also called the crest. |
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The crest depicts a Derby Ram, representing the county of Derbyshire, and a mural crown, suggestive of a town wall and thus borough status. |
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Near to the cross, along the crest of the ridge, are a series of low Bronze Age burial cairns and the remains of associated stone rows. |
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The crest is a Cornish chough, and Cornish choughs holding ostrich feathers are found as supporters. |
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The crown is semiglobular and rounded, with a transverse crest and a long uvula that does not extend beyond the root. |
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Cranial skeletogenic mesenchyme is derived from two distinct embryonic sources, cephalic paraxial mesoderm and cranial neural crest. |
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The tricortical iliac crest bone grafts also have good biomechanical performance and can withstand strong compression forces. |
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He carries a vinewood stick and his helmet, with the crest placed sideways. |
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There are several way marked walks where you might even encounter the Northern Hairy Wood Ant and birds such as the gold crest and nuthatch. |
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Internal Revenue has its own crest or coat of arms or something. |
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We walk among the graves of his family cemetery on the crest of the hill. |
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Researchers interpret the crest as a display device and possibly as a resonating chamber to produce sounds. |
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The woolly adelgid has chewed its way up the crest of the Appalachian Mountains from the Carolinas to Canada. |
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Ascend a long, easy snow couloir back left to the crest of Cassin Ridge at 17700 feet, where there is a campsite. |
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Except for the river valleys and wind gaps, the crest of the escarpment is almost continuous along its length. |
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Flint axes have also been found on river terraces at Farnham, on Walton and Banstead Heaths and on the crest of the escarpment above Folkestone. |
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It is bounded on its northern side by a steep escarpment, from whose crest there are extensive views northwards across the Weald. |
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The boar's head, as in the former city council's crest, refers to the legend of the boar of Cliffe Wood. |
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The lions that form parts of the arms, crest and supporters are also taken from Hereford's arms. |
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I was scrambling to my feet when I saw the car sliding back toward me, having not quite made it to the crest of the hill. |
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Having attended art college, Mercury also designed Queen's logo, called the Queen crest, shortly before the release of the band's first album. |
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The shirt is embroidered with a crest based upon the lion rampant of the Royal Standard of Scotland. |
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In 1953, the club crest was changed to an upright blue lion looking backwards and holding a staff. |
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For the first time, the crest was rendered in colour, which varied slightly over the crest's lifespan, finally becoming red, gold and green. |
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Because of the numerous revisions of the crest, Arsenal were unable to copyright it. |
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Therefore, in 2002 they introduced a new crest featuring more modern curved lines and a simplified style, which was copyrightable. |
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The celebrations included a modified version of the current crest worn on their jerseys for the season. |
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The crest was all white, surrounded by 15 oak leaves to the right and 15 laurel leaves to the left. |
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In 1934, Leeds switched to blue and yellow halved shirts incorporating the city crest, white shorts and blue socks with yellow tops. |
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The club also adopted their first badge in 1934, using the city crest as Leeds City had. |
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The owl came from the city crest, which itself was based on the crest of Sir John Saville, the first alderman of Leeds. |
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Since the 1921 FA Cup final the Tottenham Hotspur crest has featured a cockerel. |
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In 1972, the crest was redesigned as the result of a competition, won by the Treasurer of the Supporters Club, John Gammage. |
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The crest is 3D injection moulded on a raised pouch, and a new redesigned deconstructed neckline. |
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Tigers' very first kit was black with white shorts and black socks, the shirt had the club's crest in the centre of the chest. |
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As part of a rebrand across all of the RFL in 2017, a new England crest was introduced. |
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Wigan became known as the Wigan Warriors and had a new club crest with the words Warriors and a warrior on it. |
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The first addition to the shield was in the form of a crest borne above the shield. |
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It was during the reign of Edward III that the crest began to be widely used in English heraldry. |
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The shape of the arches of the crown has been represented differently at different times, and can help to date a depiction of the crest. |
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The helm on which the crest was borne was originally a simple steel design, sometimes with gold embellishments. |
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Prior to about 1800, the crest of the Appalachian Mountains was seen as the western frontier. |
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The supporters are two salmon bearing rings, and the crest is a half length figure of Saint Mungo. |
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The original 1866 grant placed the crest atop a helm, but this was removed in subsequent grants. |
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The heraldic crest of the Royal Marines commemorates the history of the Corps. |
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The crest on top of the arms is a white or silver legless wyvern with red and white wounds showing, on a wreath of red and white. |
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The emblem of the Scotland team is the thistle, which is on the team's badge in a crest. |
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The station crest of the former RAF Leuchars, Fife, also showed the Saltire, in this case surmounted by a sword. |
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Of particular importance and unique to vertebrates is the presence of neural crest cells. |
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A thousand years later, the progenitors of Clan Sutherland, equally impressed, adopted the wildcat on their family crest. |
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The crest is a statant guardant lion wearing the St Edward's Crown, himself on another representation of that crown. |
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Perched on the pinnacle of a knight's stall is his helm, decorated with mantling and topped by his crest. |
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A sign of allegiance to a certain clan chief is the wearing of a crest badge. |
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However, it was not until 1977 that Celtic finally adopted the club crest on their shirts. |
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For their centenary year in 1988, a commemorative crest was worn, featuring the Celtic cross that appeared on their first shirts. |
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The star that represents this triumph was retained when the usual crest was reinstated the following season. |
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A special crest was introduced with a Celtic knot design embroidered round the traditional badge. |
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The kits also include a commemorative crest, designed specifically for the season. |
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The way the scroll crest has appeared on the club shirt has varied slightly through the years. |
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In November 1972, the club unveiled an official crest or logo, designed by Aberdonian graphic designer Donald Addison. |
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The Crawshay family crest included a pile of cannonballs in token of the crucial role of their ironworks. |
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Its crest was Eryr Wen, a stylised white eagle mounted on dark green shield, with the flag of Wales at the top left hand corner. |
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The crest, an eagle or phoenix above a flaming tower, may signify the College's rebirth after the 1885 fire. |
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The crest was also changed to one in which the Welsh dragon was more prominent than the traditional bluebird. |
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This changed in 1959, when they played in shirts with a simple crest featuring an image of a bluebird. |
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Variations on this crest remained until the 1980s, when extra features including words and additional motifs were added. |
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Lying just southwest of San Luis Obispo, it's a narrow, twisting cleft that rises from Avila Beach to the crest of the Irish Hills. |
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The crest and the lee slope are overgrown with marram grass reaching 40-60 cm in height. |
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The link has long been considered a possibility because nerve cells and melanocytes have a common origin in the embryo known as the neural crest. |
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Meanwhile, the tensile strain of valley bottom and the compression strain of the crest increase with the increasing of the fault displacement. |
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Chelicera slightly protruding, proximal article with dorsal and ventral crest, and dual cheliceral dentition. |
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Some were lavishly painted in polychrome enamels and gilding, while others, particularly later examples, might incorporate only a small crest or monogram in blue and white. |
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The crest was a lighthouse, and the motto Jure et justitia valemus. |
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It lies just behind the crest of the hill, possibly for concealment, and is defended with bastions and orillons although it appears not to have been finished. |
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The border between the Black Sea and the Caspian is usually placed along the crest of the Caucasus Mountains, although it is sometimes placed further north. |
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The head is bottle green with a small crest and distinctive red wattle. |
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Immature birds lack the dark stripe on the head and are generally duller in appearance than adults, with a grey head and neck, and a small, dark grey crest. |
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The crest is a ram's head crest, found in the arms both of Westmorland County Council and Barrow County Borough, with Cumberland's Parnassus flowers again. |
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Mentally I marked the point where the big guy's rack had disappeared into the sunrise, just to the left of a large bitterbrush on the crest of the main ridge. |
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New magma from deep within the Earth rises easily through these weak zones and eventually erupts along the crest of the ridges to create new oceanic crust. |
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The water level was just below the crest and the seaward slope was weak. |
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This may be exaggerated to the extent that the leading face forms a barrel profile, with the crest falling forward and down as it extends over the air ahead of the wave. |
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As a result, the upper parts will propagate at a higher velocity than the base and the leading face of the crest will become steeper and the trailing face flatter. |
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Varying depths along a wave crest cause the crest to travel at different phase speeds, with those parts of the wave in deeper water moving faster than those in shallow water. |
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Let the word be 'Not without mustard'. Your crest is very rare, sir. |
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The oldest official emblem of The Salvation Army is the crest. |
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Shoreline indicators may be morphological features such as the berm crest, scarp edge, vegetation line, dune toe, dune crest and cliff or the bluff crest and toe. |
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The cerebral carotid then passes closely apposed to the basisphenoid, ventral to the otosphenoidal crest, where it enters the cerebral carotid canal. |
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On 6 March 1962 a further grant of crest and supporters was obtained. |
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In March 2015, Cardiff announced a new crest which would predominantly feature the Bluebird once again with an oriental dragon replacing the standard Welsh dragon. |
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The crest above the shield was a Welsh dragon rising from flames, symbolising the revival of the county's industry following a period of economic depression. |
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The team wore a special crest on 8 December 2012 in a home league match against Stirling Albion, to commemorate the 140th anniversary of their formation. |
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As the Severn becomes tidal the associated deity changed to Nodens, who was represented mounted on a seahorse, riding on the crest of the Severn bore. |
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Between 1997 and 1999 the scroll crest featured within a shield. |
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We discovered a small, inactive colony on the crest of southern coastal cliffs in 2002 that were unlike rabbit or Burrowing Owl burrows, and appeared to belong to shearwaters. |
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Today the original scroll crest appears on the club's strips whereas the lion rampant club crest is used by the media, on club merchandise and on official club documents. |
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The original club crest was a simple green cross on a red oval background. |
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The crest at Lossiemouth no longer exists and although little now remains of the airfield at Elgin, the concrete crest is a war memorial for those who served there. |
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This was also the crest used in the Royal Arms of the Kingdom of Scotland. |
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Neural crest cells migrate through the body from the nerve cord during development, and initiate the formation of neural ganglia and structures such as the jaws and skull. |
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The crest is on the left breast of the shirt, and consists of a white shield with the generic Team GB logo in blue, with the words London 2012 below it. |
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The coat of arms on an escutcheon forms the central element of the full heraldic achievement which in its whole consists of shield, supporters, crest, and motto. |
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This new crest drew criticism from large sections of the St Helens faithful, who were afraid of the club losing its connection to the town to attract a wider fan base. |
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Indeed, the physical confines behind the crest of Ambion Hill, combined with a difficulty of communications, probably physically hampered any attempt he made to join the fray. |
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It is a merge of both the shield crest and the old lions crest. |
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Molar microwear and shearing crest development in Miocene catarrhines. |
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The club crest is derived from the Manchester City Council coat of arms, although all that remains of it on the current crest is the ship in full sail. |
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The regality of the bottle is enhanced with a rich gold crown showcasing a custom crest capturing Katy Perry's playful essence-regal cats, a music clef, hearts and dagger. |
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Mineralization is found on surface along the crest of an antiform proximal to the thrust faulted contact of Harkless sediments and overlying Emigrant limestones. |
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At the same time, a wave of retrophilia started to crest. Clothing companies like Homage came up with unique ways to commercialize the interest in yesteryear. |
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A ridge or mountain ridge is a geological feature consisting of a chain of mountains or hills that form a continuous elevated crest for some distance. |
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The lands west of Quebec and west of a line running along the crest of the Allegheny mountains became Indian territory, temporarily barred to settlement. |
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