The approximate locations of the major fissures are inferred from areas of relatively sparse pulmonary vascularity. |
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Finger splits, or fissures, are one of the more frequent winter skin complaints Kunin addresses. |
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Slowly the molten rock solidified, and fissures appeared, while the water was still hot and fluid. |
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Boston thinks the bots could also tackle challenging surface terrain on the red planet, including polar ice caps riddled with fissures. |
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Her knuckles were full of tiny fissures and wrinkles, the backs covered with freckles, moles and scars. |
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Tired twinkles of light came through the fissures in the roof tiles and a small window in the back wall. |
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Occasionally we encounter small crevasses, innocuous little fissures cutting slashes through the pristine whiteness of the slope. |
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The branching dendrites found in moss agate were created by mineral deposits of manganese and iron trapped in fissures within the rock. |
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Karst is an area of irregular limestone in which erosion has produced fissures, sinkholes, underground streams, and caverns. |
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Dry skin lotions, creams, or thicker preparations may be used to lubricate the skin, prevent fissures, and keep the skin pliable. |
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Where land meets sea in the north, the power of the ocean has chiselled undercuts, caves and fissures into the limestone cliff. |
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Many delegates discussed how Asian media confronts the fissures between democracy and the global market economy. |
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Instead, I began to see the conflicts and fissures that exist in the city and divide its inhabitants into different groups, classes and cultures. |
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However, one more frequently finds the commonly described five lobes not separated by fissures. |
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The fissures in the rocks seem to burrow ever deeper into the earth and seem blindingly black and dark. |
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The occurrence of ventifacts and frost fissures implies a cold, windy periglacial climate. |
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Several stunning sequences show the earth split apart in massive fissures as people tumble like spilled marbles. |
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The continual missile attacks, which are now coming closer, have opened larger fissures in the glass. |
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These fissures can be sealed with a resin film to protect the surface from decay. |
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Sandstone-filled cracks exposed at the unconformity are viewed as periglacial frost fissures. |
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His job responsibilities required that he wear latex gloves, and he eventually developed coryza, skin exfoliation, and skin fissures. |
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They are full of cracked or misaligned paving slabs or kerbstones, running fissures and uneven surfaces everywhere. |
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The party chair race has exposed deep fissures within the Democratic Party. |
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But there are fissures in the cocky exterior that occasionally reveal a rage and a wretchedness that seems to border on despair. |
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The lower extremities and feet should be inspected for signs of chronic ischemia, infection, ulcerations, fissures, fungus or xanthomas. |
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Case 1 had trigonocephaly and up-slanting palpebral fissures, while case 2 had attention deficit, dolichocephaly and long face. |
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Water gurgled up out of the hole and the ice around it began to leak through long fissures. |
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A rabbit scampered through a patch of limestone pavement, in and out of the deep fissures and we climbed a bit in a small gully. |
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In the process, what could have been a portentous freak show of rural grotesques became a memorable portrait of painful family fissures. |
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Surgical dilation or release of the internal sphincter has been the traditional treatment of chronic or severe fissures. |
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The poems themselves act as fissures in the surface of consumerism, defamiliarizing cultural meanings. |
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This region surrounds the posterior limit of the Sylvian fissures and extends inferiorly into the lateral temporal lobes. |
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It may be extensive and cover a whole lobe or whole lung and obliterate lobar fissures. |
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These changes may result in granulation, fissures, ecchymoses, telangiectases and ulcerations. |
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The most common variation of the lungs is the presence of supernumerary fissures. |
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There are cave-like hollows in the walls, deep fissures, and piles of sharply splintered rock strewn about as if blasting has just taken place. |
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Plastic coatings placed by a dental professional in the pits and fissures of the permanent teeth can help reduce caries. |
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The pair were charged with stealing pounamu, or greenstone, a neglected treasure fused into fissures of southern mountains. |
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The plants were growing from several fissures in the mafic bedrock that underlies the creek. |
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Sunlight vaporizes the ice, opening fissures which spew gas and dust into space. |
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It is easy for tiny amounts of food to get trapped in the tiny dents or fissures, and if you do not brush them thoroughly, bacteria can build up and start to decay the tooth. |
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They have confirmed that an underwater investigations have identified hairline fissures on the A-frame structures which support the propellor shafts. |
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The cuts fracture, creating a microscopic web of fissures below the surface which provide a safe harbor for bacteria. |
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The sub-horizontal fissures in the breccia are infilled with laminated shale of identical lithology to the overlying basal bed of the Blue Lias Formation. |
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Some Net enthusiasts rhapsodize about the coming of McLuhan's Global Village, when in fact the fractures and fissures among religious groups are as strong as ever. |
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There are over 100 surface pumps that remove water from aquifers, geologic units where water is stored between grains of sand or in rock fissures. |
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Its fissures are forever present and not that far beneath the surface of every day life. |
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Many Americans fear some of their own governmental fissures and fragilities. |
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However, producing these two rustic finishes creates minute fissures in the stone, thereby increasing its liquid absorption and its retention of dirt and pollutants. |
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The amount of melt is critical in maximizing the thickness of the recrystallized zone around the container and to the sealing of any fissures in the zone of metamorphism. |
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The reef comprises interconnected blocks of rock which are undercut and full of fissures and cracks, providing concealment for an abundance of marine life. |
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Its too-tasteful palette of moss green, taupe, deep mustard and soft white was only partly offset by the raw factuality of the underlying wall's fissures and patches. |
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There are vertical walls with jagged buttresses, sweeping canyons, arches, narrow gullies and fissures in the rock that develop into caves at the waterline. |
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Those foods containing refined carbohydrates that are fine enough to remain on the teeth by sticking to the fissures on the tooth surface are termed cariogenic. |
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The philosophers in the first century wrote of gases producing euphoria and of a spring emanating from fissures, or chasms, in the bedrock inside the oracular chamber. |
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The infection may extend to the cartilaginous skeleton of the ear canal and through Santorini's fissures to reach the temporal bone, causing osteitis. |
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The shelves and fissures which bisect these rocks are home to edible crabs, velvet swimming crabs, prawns, squat lobsters and the occasional large common lobster. |
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The fissures between allowed only thin, precise shafts of pale light to strike the trunks and grass, as if the trees were fashioning the sun into a gallery of shapes. |
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That in 4390 was large and complex, with eruptions at the central vent and radial fissures on the flank, submarine and phreatic eruptions, and pyroclastic flows. |
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Early-stage hydrothermal leaching of the limestone created solution cavities and brecciated zones along the fissures and faults, providing sites for subsequent ore deposition. |
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In these types of deposits, gold and silver are precipitated by hot springs in fissures, faults, and explosive breccias in the upper portions of the mineral system. |
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Flat lawns are formed into an abstract pattern that recalls tectonic fractures and fissures in the earth's surface, their edges defined by dark grey concrete retaining walls. |
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In this natural and inevitable process of atrophy, parts of the brain shrink, while the sulci, or fissures of the brain become shallower and wider. |
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But by the time the novel is over, we've seen how small irruptions of human weakness, no less than gigantic cultural fissures, can change everything. |
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In addition, the state itself is subject to the diverse cultural pressures and social fissures to which intellectuals, in their writings about folk religion, give voice. |
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The war opened up profound fissures among the leading capitalist powers. |
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It is clearly a plan on the part of outsiders to come in this country and spark civil war, create sectarian violence and try to expose fissures in the society. |
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Isn't there advantage in exposing the fissures within society itself? |
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Losing the vote would not mean the end of his government, but would be an embarrassment and expose the fissures within the 20-party ruling coalition. |
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Limestone has fissures and is soluble in water, therefore rivers have been able to carve deep, narrow valleys. |
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Giraffes can also suffer from a skin disorder, which comes in the form of wrinkles, lesions or raw fissures. |
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Around 295 million years ago upwelling magma spread through fissures and between strata in the earlier Carboniferous Limestone country rock. |
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Some intrusive rocks solidified in fissures as dikes and intrusive sills at shallow depth and are called subvolcanic or hypabyssal. |
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Further observations of the speed of flame fronts in fissures and passageways led him to design a lamp with fine tubes admitting the air. |
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For some years prior to 1815 he had been experimenting on the blowers or fissures from which gas erupted. |
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Cysts in pleural fissures were indeed attached by a thin pedicle to the visceral pleura. |
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Instabilities in such sediments can result in the deposited material to slump, producing fissures and folding. |
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Fraccing fluids contain proppants that forced into the natural fractures of fissures of the rock under pressure. |
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The symptoms include recurrent itching, redness, fissures, and vulvar dysuria. |
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Sure enough, on the screen craned overhead the smoking fissures, the pyroclastic flows and ejecta. |
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The magma, which is brought to the surface through fissures or volcanic eruptions, solidifies at a faster rate. |
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Hydrothermal vents are fissures situated at the ocean bottom, which spit scalding, acidic water out into the surrounding sea. |
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Features include hypertelorism, downslanting palpebral fissures, low-set ears, a webbed neck and pulmonary artery stenosis. |
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Furthermore, the formation, evolution and transfixion of fissures under different temperatures were studied. |
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Chest radiography frequently demonstrates cavity formation and swelling of the affected lobe, which causes bulging of the interlobar fissures. |
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The clinical features of lichen sclerosus include hypopigmentation, atrophy, telangiectasias, erosions and fissures, purpura, and scarring. |
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Under pressure, the heated water rises to the surface along fissures and faults in the limestone. |
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Such tears are commonly mistaken for hemorrhoids, which unlike fissures don't cause pain with bowel movements. |
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Planthoppers begin life as eggs deposited in fissures on the surface of their host plant or even beneath the bark. |
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Some pseudofossils, such as dendrites, are formed by naturally occurring fissures in the rock that get filled up by percolating minerals. |
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Natural fissures were popularly regarded as entrances to the subterranean house of Hades and his predecessors, home of the dead. |
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The most common type of bark is smooth grey in young individuals, developing shallow longitudinal fissures with narrow ridges in older trees. |
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In short, meeting the basic principles of the solidary pact has resulted in a number of fissures being created between German states against the centre. |
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Stress fractures, tiny fissures in the bone, often occur in the foot and leg when too great a burden has been placed on the bone without adequate recovery time. |
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When building dens, females make use of natural shelters such as fissures in rocks, cliffs overhanging riverbanks and holes thickly covered by vegetation. |
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Sulfur, chlorine, and fluorine gasses could have been released into the atmosphere from eruptions spewing out of large fissures, which is common in basalt flood formation. |
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Their cliffs, white with black stains, are steep and forbidding and interspersed with karstic fissures and caves, which were often used for burials. |
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Emeralds tend to have numerous inclusions and surface breaking fissures. |
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Avoid rough emery boards These old fashioned orange emery boards are too harsh for your nails, causing small cracks and fissures that lead to breakage. |
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Iain Cleator's specialized clinic which deals exclusively with the most common anorectal problems mainly hemorrhoids, fissures and colorectal cancer screening. |
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The clinical manifestations included, but were not limited to, dermatitis acneiform, pruritus, erythema, rash, skin exfoliation, paronychia, dry skin, and skin fissures. |
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The ancient water, trapped in thin fissures in granitelike rock, has been bubbling up from a zinc and copper mine for decades in Timmins, Ontario. |
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The pia-arachnoid was extremely congested over the hemispheres, with subarachnoid hemorrhage on the upper and lateral aspects and along the Sylvian fissures. |
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The sylvian fissures appear continuous across the hemispheres. |
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The illustrated samples bearing cassiterite and yazganite minerals come from the edges of fissures in the porphyric pyroxene andesitic rocks at Senir Sirti. |
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Some old, underfired clay pantiles might be damaged by button mosses rooting in cracks and fissures. But most post-war tiles are hard enough to withstand a bit of moss growth. |
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