Clear acrylic tunnels through the aquariums would allow visitors to see the animals. |
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On the upper concourse the entrance tunnels to the seating, known as vomitories, used a mix of precast and in situ walls. |
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Outside the black plastic tunnels the sun is bright, and the breeze is bracing and Nordic. |
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My friends seem to spend an inordinate amount of time inside wind tunnels, aboard locomotives, and underwater. |
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My daughter also had a brief go in the adventure playground, which consisted of tunnels and passageways created out of stacked hay inside a barn. |
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The housing consists of prefabricated concrete caissons which are inset in the lagoon floor and contain service tunnels and machinery. |
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We were half-dead by the time we were back at the point where the tunnels forked. |
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The island's main pull, however, is its bird life and sea views, which you get to via pathways, stairways, tunnels and dangerous cliff edges. |
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His brother, meanwhile, had starved to death, trapped in his wheelchair in a mountain of trash and accessible only via a network of tunnels. |
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She had been running for four days now, a harum-scarum tumbling flight through passages and tunnels. |
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It was fascinating how Mr Fox so quickly constructed that complex network of tunnels. |
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In the back of the cavern goblins and demons poured in and out in a chaotic flow through many winding tunnels. |
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Four tunnels off the lumen of the proventriculus of the carpenter bee, Xylocopa virginica virginica, have been discovered. |
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He knew not if she wanted him to delve into the tunnels once more or to stay put. |
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Their die-straight tunnels pierce the most awesome rock barriers nonchalantly. |
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The development of indraft wind tunnels, however, has not been as well documented. |
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Fauna such as anemones, gorgonia and lace corals thrive in the caverns and tunnels of the Turkish Aegean and Mediterranean. |
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Butler applied Microgravity and gradient techniques to the detection and delineation of shallow sub-surface cavities and tunnels. |
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Since aerodynamicists did not have wind tunnels, they would have to use supersonic-capable aircraft. |
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The club, which trains up to 70 dogs on Sunday mornings, lost a range of equipment including see-saws, tyre tunnels, and A-frames. |
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Many adits, shafts and tunnels, some extending over 100 m, pursue these veins deep underground. |
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Shot mostly in dark tunnels and grimy city streets, it oozes a gothic quality. |
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Diving through one of the many submarine tunnels and along the cliff faces is truly exhilarating. |
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Even in unifoliate leaves, the initial larval tunnels are rarely seen; they become visible only later when they turn brown. |
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These schemes made use of the flow of water through a series of reservoirs, tunnels, penstocks and power plants. |
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Whether you are tramping through muddy forests, mysterious tunnels or misty waters, the locations drip with ghoulish detail. |
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Running in confined tunnels as they do, subways had to be all-electric from the get-go. |
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Male death-watch beetles bang their heads against the sides of their wooden tunnels to attract females. |
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It took eighteen months to blast out the first four tunnels which were within a mile and a half of the beginning. |
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Horse and rider moved as one, seemingly uncaring of any mole tunnels or gopher holes. |
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There are steep drop-offs, caverns, tunnels, rocky slopes, offshore outcrops and reefs. |
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Gold miners often have to descend more than 3 kilometres underground to drill ore in sweltering narrow tunnels. |
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It was mainly garrisoned by British troops, who dug more tunnels here to add to the mediaeval ones which already existed there. |
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The candelabra had gone out several minutes ago, due to the drafty nature of the tunnels. |
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He and I spent upwards of an hour climbing through tunnels and whizzing down the slides. |
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The long sand and gravel bodies called eskers were formed in subglacial cave-like tunnels where sand and gravel were deposited by flowing water. |
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Diversionary tunnels were dug from the cavities to aqueducts filling the reservoirs, which were lined with lime. |
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With a snare of some sort in one and a swarm of buzzing insects in the other, neither of the tunnels looked inviting. |
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Instead, it must be calculated from data collected in wind tunnels or measured in the surface boundary layer at sea. |
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The lines, characterised by deep cuttings, high embankments, tunnels and viaducts, were known by locomotive crews as the Alpine Route. |
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Next thing you know, you're entombed in 136 tons of garbage and burrowing through your house via a system of intricate tunnels. |
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It still had a functional role in WW II, when the cliffs on which it stood were honeycombed with tunnels. |
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I crawled around one of the thousands of tunnels honeycombing the island, then I returned to the squadron. |
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In the other direction from Poncebos, a bizarre funicular railway tunnels through the rock up to the sleepy village of Bulnes. |
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Our company has built several funhouses complete with spinning tunnels, illusions, vibrating floors, funny mirrors all inside a 3D environment. |
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Beneath the cliffs at a depth of 20m or so, huge boulders are piled high, separated by narrow crevices and tunnels. |
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Mopping up continued through the night as frantic efforts were made to disinter the troops buried in the tunnels. |
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He said US forces would move to other parts of a region honeycombed with caves and tunnels that could hide terrorists or guns and explosives. |
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The feeding tunnels and oviposition punctures of dipterous miners are unsightly and objectionable in crops destined for market. |
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Sir Joseph Bazalgette's solution helped solve the problem with his 82-mile system of tunnels and pumping stations to cope with the effluence. |
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Also, the early Hittite capital Boghazkoy had predug tunnels to allow for defensive sorties against any prospective besiegers. |
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It's on the buildings high above and in the subways and tunnels deep below. |
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According to the 1996 Highway Road Humps Regulations they must not be built on or within 25 metres of bridges, subways, culverts or tunnels. |
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They stepped into the tunnels of the sewers, in the ankle-deep, putrid water. |
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The chateau on the northern outskirts is a strongpoint of bunkers connected by tunnels, surrounded by dense minefields and barbed wire. |
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Settlements in other areas of the Brahui region depend on qanat irrigation, a system of tunnels dug between shafts to carry water. |
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Bricked in and built around, the vaults became a warren of nooks, crannies and tunnels forming the historic city's underworld. |
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The Underground vanished deeper into the warren of tunnels beneath London, but without the support of the Sleeper agents. |
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A single pocket gopher may exist within an extensive system of feeding tunnels and chambers. |
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The machines were also light enough in weight to be frequently hauled through the tunnels and operated on top of flatbed rail cars. |
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This table features five flippers, each of which are required to fuel a locomotive that runs along a railroad and through tunnels. |
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Underground mining entails sinking shafts to reach the target resource and driving tunnels and adits, either inclined or horizontally. |
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The land was wild and empty, but there always seemed to be a human shape lurking in the tunnels. |
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Animal tunnels incorporated into the design will also allow local wildlife to cross. |
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Beavers fell trees, elephants trample plants, ants strip trees of bark, moles dig tunnels, and so the list goes on. |
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At Wapping we were able to see the twin tunnels which were the original Brunel designed ones. |
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Caves, tunnels and mine workings may be used to provide cover for communications centers and stations. |
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Dark blotches and tunnels in the leaves of beet greens, spinach, and Swiss chard are the work of the spinach leaf miner. |
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What drew these artists into sunless caverns and tunnels sometimes less than a metre high has been the subject of vigorous argument. |
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Therefore, our tunnels were about two feet in diameter with no bracing or shoring of any kind. |
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The riotous crowd around him swept him along through arcane underground tunnels to a vaulted hall. |
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When I was a student at Parsons in the late 70's, this map kept me company every day as I became an eager voyager through the city's tunnels. |
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One or two small tunnels also exist within the walls, leading perhaps to other caverns or cave complexes, or to nowhere at all. |
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The tunnels were shored up by timber and after 85 years, many of these timber supports are rotting away. |
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This group has a great diversity of roosting habits, including caves, hollow logs, tree branches, tunnels, and human houses. |
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There were several switches, bridges and tunnels, signals and watertowers, and a roundhouse in the center. |
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Bridges and tunnels are being built to link cities and towns to the railway route. |
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A piercing white light from one of the tunnels preceded a deep rumbling noise, warning of the roller coaster's arrival. |
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In this city the citizens run madly, ignoring the back alleys, tunnels and buildings of yesterday. |
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We may even build scale models and test them in wind tunnels and other ways. |
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Yesterday these tunnels and caverns had seemed wonderful, but now the walls felt stifling and oppressive. |
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A newcomer could easily get lost in its tunnels, and the unwary is easy prey to predatory wasps or mantises. |
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The cars drift sedately along for an hour and a half, passing through green tunnels of moss-clad trees and misty clouds. |
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Leaders of the dreaded thuggee cult were trapped and held captive in tunnels by Major General Sir W.H. Sleeman. |
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Where there were kings, queens, palaces there ought to be intrigues, conspiracies and secret tunnels. |
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Its attractive maze of underground tunnels affords pedestrians safe passage under one of the most ruthless traffic interchanges in Europe. |
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But he cautioned there will always be traffic tie-ups as long as drivers continue to slow down in tunnels. |
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It was through these tunnels Taffle brought the boat, deftly maneuvering the tiller. |
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Also, hallucinogenic drugs, such as mescaline and LSD, are known to produce visions of striped tunnels and spiral chambers. |
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The number of tunnels needed to support a fully meshed IPSec network geometrically increases with the number of sites. |
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Apple maggot earned the name railroad worm long ago for its meandering tunnels beneath the apple skin and eventually throughout the flesh. |
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The rock's many natural caves have been added to over the years by a series of remarkable tunnels. |
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Future works will include the rust proofing of the grates and other significant metalwork in the tunnels. |
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One orc says that something hurt the creature and is still lurking in the tunnels. |
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All of them sensed the palpable miasma of evil which clung to its tunnels, though some were more sensitive to it than others. |
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We have done a lot of work in the wind tunnels since and in straight-line gliding I'm one of the fastest skiers in the world. |
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Cars would be banished to long tunnels running beneath the complex, and lorries and trucks to an even deeper tunnel network below them. |
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Obvious examples are the excavation of building foundation and tunnels that extend below the water-table. |
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Rather, odds are that there were no tunnels beneath the preschool and that what was found was an old trash pit, nothing more. |
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Gone were those wide house-lined avenues and those maze-like tunnels betwixt and between them. |
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While working in tunnels, miners looked for listening tunnels and countermines of the defender. |
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As well as digging their own tunnels, the miners had to listen out for enemy tunnellers. |
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He led us through some fantastic coral formations, tunnels, and schools of shiners so thick you couldn't see the person in front of you. |
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They backtracked far into the cave, away into one of the tunnels that branched off from the main one, and finally into a small cavern. |
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Settlement troughs both over single and twin tunnels can often be described by a Gaussian curve. |
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Moles don't dig new tunnels each time they forage, and in fact a very active mole territory may sport very few molehills. |
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Nowadays tunnels are mainly lined with concrete segments or with concrete pumped in between the excavated ground and internal shuttering. |
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The tunnels are quite long and many employees who's job it is to shuttle stuff back and forth throughout headquarters drive little golf cart. |
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I hope the tunnels and more roads will change the situation so I can have a car soon. |
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Drivers must now call the police immediately if their vehicles break down on elevated roads, tunnels and bridges across the Huangpu River. |
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It is not known if all the burrow nesting species excavate the tunnels or if some use tunnels dug by rodents or other animals. |
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Many fungi are found in soil and often fostered by small ground animals and their feces-filled tunnels. |
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The extra support is necessary because tomatoes in the tunnels grow more vigorously than field-grown plants. |
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He said over the past two years he had been commercially growing bedding plants in tunnels in his garden. |
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Today Palomino grapes are frequently dried to raisins under plastic tunnels, pressed, and fortified before fermentation to make a mistela. |
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The heritage railway offers much to the enthusiast, including two tunnels, two level-crossings, two signal boxes and six stations. |
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It was a dim, twilit gloom filled the enormous tunnels, muffling all hints of life within them. |
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Capabilities such as virtual routing will also aid network scalability as multiple tunnels are multiplexed into one larger flow of traffic. |
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I recall an occasion when I had to crawl through the boiler room and school tunnels to retrieve him! |
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They moved on, slinking through the slimy, black tunnels, trying hard not to think or display any emotion. |
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In future more downward sloping tunnels will be designed into the mine to increase storage capacity. |
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The firm wanted to eliminate building mandatory escape cross tunnels between bores, a job requiring tricky ground freezing, says Harnois. |
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The bouncy castle, complete with tunnels, hidey-holes and windows, is a particular hit. |
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These stones can be viewed in the archeological tunnels that have been opened in the past few years. |
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Many vespertilionids live in caves, but these bats can also be found in mine shafts, tunnels, tree roosts, rock crevices, buildings, etc. |
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Voles have been known to travel tunnels developed by moles to gain access to flower bulbs and other plant roots. |
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The middle section has some very large tunnels that cut through the reef crest. |
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Operations in the 1940s consisted of a large open pit with smaller cuts and several tunnels. |
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The subway froze in its tracks, and thousands of people found themselves trapped in stuffy box cars and pitch-dark tunnels. |
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Most caecilians are terrestrial burrowers, either constructing their own tunnels or living in the litter of the forest floor. |
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If they were to sell off the operating agency lock, stock, and barrel, and lease the use of the tunnels and stations for, say, a 99-year period, there might be hope. |
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Nearby, rusting away on the colliery surface, is some of the world's most modern mining hardware that has been salvaged from coalfaces and tunnels half-a-mile underground. |
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She cast about for his location, eventually following the architecture down below the house and grounds into the warren of interconnected bunkers and tunnels. |
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There were about thirty tunnels in the mound complex, some as deep as three feet underground and snaking among the tough roots of the salt plants. |
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This could be a serious curtailment to our subterranean activities, there is talk of duck boards, bilge pumps, aqualungs and horizontal drainage tunnels. |
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The long crypt tunnels into a hillside, only visible by a smattering of skylights peeking up between graves. |
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He took us on a tour of the labyrinth which was a maze of many small tunnels interconnected randomly and the Britishers had had a tough time capturing the place. |
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Some were housed in normal laboratory cages, while others stayed in more interesting pens, with multiple levels, ramps, bridges, tunnels and even a climbing chain. |
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The work for which he is probably best remembered is his construction of a network of tunnels, bridges and viaducts for the Great Western Railway. |
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While surface erosion caused by water can produce dramatic landscapes in many badlands, a considerable amount of subsurface erosion in the form of tunnels can also occur. |
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For four years Alexander continued to run the company on his own, gaining a reputation as a talented construction engineer building fine bridges, viaducts and tunnels. |
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The Kansas City airport terminals were evacuated and passengers took shelter in tunnels, but there were no deaths reported in the metropolitan area of over one million people. |
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I think New York has so many tunnels due to a subway craze at the turn of the century and when the bubble burst and the companies went bust the tunnels got sealed off. |
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Glenn opened his mouth to respond, but quickly snapped it shut when the unmistakable sound of sirens echoed down the tunnels, the screech of brakes, someone yelling. |
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From freezers and hardening tunnels to compressors, evaporators and air handling units, a sea of chilling and freezing equipment is available to the dairy industry. |
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The whole area was an underground maze of tunnels and bunkers. |
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All over Yorkshire, and elsewhere, there are hundreds of miles of dismantled track, bridges, viaducts and fine, hard-won tunnels, just mouldering. |
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You enjoy the soundtrack a lot more in the convertible version, and I could often be found in tunnels, gearing down, top down, and enjoying the soundtrack of this engine. |
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Having failed to get into the guard's van at the back of the train he jumped on to the back of the train which then went through two tunnels and four stations. |
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The finished playground will include climbing frames, greenhouses, propagation tunnels and woodland space which will be ideal for building dens and a barn. |
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Through the tunnels we went, until we entered a large cavern. |
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Those allegations were bolstered by an archeologist's conclusion that the remains of filled-in tunnels had been found under the preschool property. |
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The underground tunnels leading to it have also been buried. |
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The train passed through bright sunlit gardens and dark tunnels as it rattled over the tracks, stopping every once in a while and blowing its long low whistle. |
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Railway service on the 29.7 kilometer-long Jiji Line resumed in January last year also following extensive repairs of collapsed tunnels, damaged track and bridges. |
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I'm hustled back down through the mud tunnels and out of the compound. |
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Tarkovsky sublimely prefigures space exploration with a five minute sequence of cars winding through the tunnels and overpasses of a modern Russian city. |
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From 1916, he guided the siting of mine tunnels, and later dugouts. |
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To let the air in, the cheese wheel is regularly pierced all the way through with a long needle, and the mold develops all along the thin tunnels thus generated. |
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It will be just a matter of time before they rearm through the tunnels, she said. |
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This park, tucked away in the hills and hollows of central Kentucky, protects the longest cave system in the world, a five-level labyrinth with more than 365 miles of tunnels. |
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Some were so disorientated that they ran down the tracks into tunnels, heedless of the danger from oncoming trains, their only instinct to get out. |
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These and the deeper tunnels form a ram system that circulates gases. |
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Generally the baddies followed you through the tunnels that you dug, but sometimes they'd just osmose through the dirt straight at you, causing much panic. |
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That we seldom saw a snake was probably due to the noise we made cooeeing and ululating to each other through a labyrinth of tunnels under the wiry branches. |
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Copan has an acropolis, four kilometres of tunnels and a hieroglyphic stairway, providing historians and archaeologists with major sources of information. |
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The last lava flow from the volcano were recorded in 1007 and the mountain contains many tunnels, pillars and other unusual features that formed as the molten basalt cooled. |
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Similarly, heart rate, wingbeat frequency, and respiration of birds flying in wind tunnels can now be compared to that of birds migrating in the wild. |
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Our tiny bus wound up through the Inguri Valley whose precipitous road hugged cliffs and ravines, worming through crude tunnels and skirting thick forests. |
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Because of the very mountainous terrain and the need for very shallow radius curves, most of the route will be in tunnels, with consequent heavy civil engineering costs. |
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Underground chambers can still be seen here and it is possible that the Kali icon was originally housed in one of these, reached through the tunnels. |
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Luckily for our boys, it also has a trapdoor in the floor leading conveniently into a series of maintenance tunnels which are accessible through any manhole in Montreal. |
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At the same time the tube lines would examine new ways of peak fare pricing, new signalling, reboring tunnels and even building entirely new tubes. |
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Work has protected wildlife along the route, including measures to keep a colony of protected great crested newts safe, badger tunnels and deer-proof fencing. |
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What is most important is that Brody has been sent into a maze of tunnels, if you like. |
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Preformed linings for tunnels were first developed using cast iron. |
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The mines, a Unesco world cultural heritage monument, attract tourists from round the world to its labyrinthine tunnels, galleries and underground lakes. |
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Ambitious plans to build tunnels under the runway and the River Almond have been attacked by cynics, who believe the project will never be approved. |
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Instead of going through one of the many tunnels the Faroese have burrowed everywhere, John takes the stunning high road and soon we reach the mist-shrouded summit. |
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It was a complex network of narrow tunnels that broke out into vast, high-ceilinged chambers with the sides curved cylindrically like the hull of a ship. |
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Authorities abroad are increasingly opting for road tunnels. |
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Rain lashed from the angry sky, icy scourges flailing Alex's head and shoulders as soon as she stepped out of the Gate she had used to escape the tunnels. |
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The Faroese also boast some spectacular road tunnels, but they're not so excited about these feats of engineering that they feel obliged to name them after people. |
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Norway is home to the longest and the deepest road tunnels in the world. |
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New roads and tunnels have been built and public transport modernised. |
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Whilst Alpine road and rail tunnels and the Channel tunnel have made travel between some of Europe's nations easier, physical and cultural barriers remain. |
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The defenders were forced back into their tunnels, where ferocious close-quarter battles went on until the Chinese blew in the entrances, entombing the defenders alive. |
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Next, the GOP should hammer away at how our roads, Bridges, and tunnels are crumbling, and push for an infrastructure initiative. |
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Unfortunately, the underground tunnels that were used to transport booze and, if necessary, escaping patrons, are off-limits. |
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The settlements above and lateral to the tunnels in plastic clays of soft to medium consistency are relatively larger than in stiffer, more brittle cohesive granular soils. |
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Instead they operated out of a vast network of tunnels, and the combat was as ferocious as any the IDF has seen for many years. |
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Audience members will be led through the tunnels of this abandoned military fort to encounter choreographed tableaux vivants that evoke each of the seven deadly sins. |
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Now aged seventy, his feet and hips are bearing the cost of his stooped shuffle through the tunnels, and his breathing is heavy with black lung, the miner's disease. |
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Now in his 80s, Blankenship claims to have charted out tunnels, corridors, and large, unnatural underground caverns. |
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Volcanoes form glassy rocks such as obsidian, and in recently formed volcanic rocks scientists have found tunnels that seem to have been created by hungry microbes. |
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Many of the Northwest Islands are joined together by tunnels carved through the solid rock of the seabed, the still unconnected islands are accessed by car ferries. |
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The underbody is flat with venturi tunnels, a front air splitter and rear diffusers, and the carbon-fibre rear wing is an option that provides some downforce at high speed. |
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The tunnels will be bored from the Seymour site with a computer-guided boring machine that will tunnel through bedrock up to 200 metres underground. |
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An amazing labyrinth of underground tunnels that lie beneath the surface of Liverpool's Edge Hill district has been intriguing the city's population for generations. |
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Branching tunnels disappeared into the darkness, studded with chiseled rock chambers. |
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These selective or directional cells are produced by base stations that send out narrow beams at the entrances to tunnels or along roads in rural areas. |
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If it goes ahead it will be Brisbane's first step down Sydney's path of mega-expensive, traffic-multiplying road tunnels, complete with an unfiltered smogstack at each end. |
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The warren of tunnels and side passages hampered Bahzell's advance badly. |
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Two smaller tunnels through Penmaenan Point, opened 1935, carried the road onto Llanfairfechan. |
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On 4 August 2015, a Sudanese migrant walked nearly the entire length of one of the tunnels. |
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It is accessed through a series of underground tunnels known as a karez system. |
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Bilateral tunnels were created beneath the rectus femoris muscle and medial thigh skin connecting the donor site and the scrotal defect. |
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The two sections of the Downtown Line Stage 2 involve the construction of three new metro stations and single-track metro tunnels. |
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In areas of high land prices and dense land use, tunnels may be the only economic route for mass transportation. |
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She led us through the tunnels for some time, until at length we reached a small door in the rock. |
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When opencast work was no longer feasible, tunnels were driven to follow the veins. |
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The service tunnel was used as a pilot tunnel, boring ahead of the main tunnels to determine the conditions. |
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A serious risk with underwater tunnels is major water inflow due to the pressure from the sea above, under weak ground conditions. |
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Pumping stations remove water in the tunnels from rain, seepage, and so on. |
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On 17 January 2015, both tunnels were closed following a lorry fire which filled the midsection of Running Tunnel North with smoke. |
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In 1829 and 1836 the first railway tunnels in the world were constructed under Liverpool. |
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The Metro system was the first in the UK to have mobile phone antennae installed in the tunnels. |
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Road tunnels were built in East London at the end of the 19th century, being the Blackwall Tunnel and the Rotherhithe Tunnel. |
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Passage across the bridge or through the tunnels is subject to a toll, its level depending on the kind of vehicle. |
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Conversely, other cities have opted to build a full metro in the suburbs, but run trams in city streets to save the cost of expensive tunnels. |
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Also during the 1960s, the Victoria line was dug under central London and, unlike the earlier tubes, the tunnels did not follow the roads above. |
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In the original Tube design, trains passing through close fitting tunnels act as pistons to create air pressure gradients between stations. |
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The tunnels under Newcastle were mechanically bored through boulder clay and lined with cast iron or concrete segments. |
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All bridges, tunnels, stations, and earthworks were built for double track. |
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The two larger tunnels are each two lanes wide and are used for motorised traffic. |
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Pedestrian access to the smaller tunnels has been discontinued, with the free bus services being used instead. |
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Outcroppings of stone, ravines, or hilly or mountainous terrain called for cuttings and tunnels. |
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There is a series of 70 mosaics inspired by Blake in the nearby railway tunnels of Waterloo Station. |
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The plan is that both tunnels should open in 2021 and they will not be private. |
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The Corps then prepared to capture two railway tunnels linking Maungdaw with the Kalapanzin valley but the Japanese struck first. |
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Manhattan Island is linked to New York City's outer boroughs and New Jersey by several tunnels as well. |
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Many aerodynamic experiments are conducted in wind tunnels, to simulate real life situations while measuring the various drag forces on the car. |
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The further bore tunnelling will link up the tunnels already planned beneath South Ruislip and Ruislip Gardens and Old Oak Common to North Acton. |
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Any reopening would require compulsory purchase and demolition of property or tunnels bored. |
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These tunnels will run from Paddington to Stratford and Canary Wharf in the east. |
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The central tunnels run from a portal just west of Paddington to Whitechapel, with further tunnelling to Stratford and to Canary Wharf. |
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The exhibition is dedicated to landscapes, especially trees and tree tunnels. |
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It was out of service between 2009 and 2012 for repair of the tunnels connecting the reservoir to the turbines. |
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Because of their larger size, male stoats are less successful than females in pursuing rodents far into tunnels. |
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Eskers are composed of sand and gravel that was deposited by meltwater streams that flowed through ice tunnels within or beneath a glacier. |
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Work has involved the cutting of several hard rock tunnels beneath the sea cliffs. |
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Plans under consideration in 2014 included new tunnels between Heathrow and Langley. |
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Automatic gas monitoring systems are discreetly positioned around the tunnels, as are emergency telephone systems. |
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The longest have been constructed for water distribution, followed by tunnels for railways. |
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The trains stopped inside the tunnels due to electronic failures caused by snow and ice. |
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Many of the motorways pass through the downtown and other parts of the city in tunnels. |
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Although the known smuggling tunnels have been sealed up, there are still old fish cellars and boat stores to be seen along the coast. |
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Honshu is connected to the islands of Hokkaido, Kyushu and Shikoku by tunnels and bridges. |
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If underground mine tunnels collapse, they cause subsidence of the ground above. |
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Burrows usually develop to eventually include multiple levels of tunnels, as well as a secondary entrance. |
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These fossorial rodents bang their head against the walls of their tunnels. |
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The lactation period lasts for four to five weeks but at the end of June the young are usually required to leave the tunnels. |
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It is suggested that in subterranean mammals vision is used to detect predators that have broken into the tunnels. |
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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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There are unproven stories of smugglers' tunnels running from the old inns and under the High Street to the town quay. |
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In the tunnelling industry, caulking refers to the sealing of joints in segmental precast concrete tunnels, commonly by using concrete. |
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Collecting a team they moved swiftly to rescue what they could, sinking tunnels to the side to search for fragments. |
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Subsequent tunnels were interrupted on 21, 23, and 25 May, and destroyed with Greek fire and vigorous combat. |
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The cargo terminal operates with 6 large coolers with 17000 boxes capacity each plus 2 coolers tunnels. |
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These tunnels remain open to visitors and are stable because of the adobe bricks that were used to build the pyramid. |
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Hundreds of besiegers were scalded or choked to death when boiling water was poured into the tunnels or fires were lit to fill them with smoke. |
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In September 2010 the Flemish Government decided to replace the bridge by a series of tunnels. |
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Construction of the scenic railway around the southwestern end of Lake Baikal required 200 bridges and 33 tunnels. |
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The rebels tried to breach the walls with explosives and bypass them via underground tunnels that led to underground close combat. |
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The larvae of many insects bore into the trees and their tunnels remain indefinitely as sources of weakness. |
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Brunel's invention provided the basis for subsequent tunnelling shields used to build the London Underground system and many other tunnels. |
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Coal seams were exposed where rivers flowed into the lake and was dug by hand off the surface and from tunnels dug into the seam. |
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Nome's gold fields, appearing untouched from the surface, are honeycombed with tunnels left by the gold rush drift miners. |
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Its length has only been exceeded by two other canal tunnels, at Standedge in the Pennines and at Strood in Kent. |
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He was an experienced mining engineer, able to survey, sink shafts, to construct railways, tunnels and stationary engines. |
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Locke also tried to avoid tunnels because in those days tunnels often took longer and cost more than planned. |
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Locke avoided tunnels almost completely on the Grand Junction but exceeded the slope limit for six miles south of Crewe. |
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Distinctive features of Locke's railway works were economy, the use of masonry bridges wherever possible and the absence of tunnels. |
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In coal mines, children would crawl through tunnels too narrow and low for adults. |
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Small rail vehicles offer effective transportation of ore and waste rock, as well as workers, through narrow tunnels. |
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The experiments show that there is complex system of caves and tunnels within the limestone cliff. |
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The complex is built in a series of Victorian tunnels situated in the centre of Bradford. |
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Although sufficient land had been purchased for two tunnels, only one would be built initially. |
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The tunnels were too narrow for electrification and were closed in 1953 when the larger Woodhead 3 tunnel was completed. |
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One of the Victorian tunnels, the south tunnel, is in a poor condition and is unused. |
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The other two older tunnels are not suitable for rail traffic due to their poor state of repair. |
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The Standedge Tunnels are four parallel tunnels beneath the Pennines in northern England. |
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Of the railway tunnels, only the one built in 1894 is currently used for rail traffic. |
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There are three railway tunnels running parallel to each other and the canal tunnel. |
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Only the 1894 rail tunnel is still operational although all three rail tunnels are still maintained. |
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The centre contains exhibitions on the history of the tunnels, the canal tunnel's recent restoration and the Huddersfield Narrow Canal. |
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His responsibilities extended to tunnels under Whitehall and tunnels for the Post Office and telecommunications. |
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The historic line was constructed in the 1870s and has several notable tunnels and viaducts such as the imposing Ribblehead. |
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The condition of many viaducts and tunnels deteriorated due to lack of investment. |
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Boeing's hypersonic, supersonic, subsonic and icing wind tunnels in Seattle and Philadelphia will remain open during the renovations. |
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The institute is also responsible for maintaining the majority of the USSR's wind tunnels. |
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Some stars may contain wormholes, throatlike tunnels connecting distant points in spacetime, a team of physicists proposes. |
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Her raggle-taggle family live underground in these tunnels, they don't really mix with the real world. |
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The battered bodyshell of the Mini Clubman 1275 GT lay in the tunnels under the factory for more than 30 years. |
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The tunnels share the same tiny dimensions as the nanotubes that chemists create with carbon. |
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The exhibition marks a new era for the wind tunnels which were originally used for speed and transonic testing of aircraft. |
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A citric acid solution had been used to stem corrosion, while the Dornier lay inside hydration tunnels. |
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Abandoned tunnels, pits, waste heaps, and highwalls speckle the Treasure State from one end to the other. |
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On the surface I have found common fossils of clams, gastropods, shrimp tunnels and tube worms. |
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In the polythene tunnels we've a mix of tares as rapid ground cover and a nitrogen fixer, with white lupin as a nitrogen fixer. |
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