Important clinical and biological differences exist between the adenoma carcinoma sequence and ulcerative colitis associated neoplasia. |
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These inspectors will render an accounting of all nuclear, chemical and biological weapons programs and will help oversee their elimination. |
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Among the most startling admissions made by scientists there was that they had weaponized the biological agent aflatoxin. |
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They have been identified in various biological kingdoms, however, they seem to be rare in plants. |
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I think we'll find biological precursors that may or may not have been weaponized. |
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Engendering in intimacy is not confined to biological reproduction or economic production. |
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High temperatures or intense radiation can destroy chemical or biological agents such as VX nerve gas or weaponized anthrax. |
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I agree with John Kyl that many terrorist organizations have access to biological agents, but they don't know how to weaponize them. |
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On 1 July 1995, they had admitted to the production of bulk biological agent, but had denied weaponizing it. |
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More and more nations are getting the ability to develop biological and nuclear weapons. |
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According to dramatic new biological evidence, it seems that women have been opting for water births since time began. |
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Stripped of its own genetic instructions, the recipient egg cell is a tiny biological machine awaiting orders. |
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The biological weapons treaty requires an affirmative majority vote of the executive to authorize an investigation. |
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The cell theory states that all biological organisms are composed of cells; cells are the unit of life and all life comes from preexisting life. |
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This is a massive stockpile of biological weapons that has never been accounted for and is capable of killing millions. |
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The long DNA chain is naturally compacted in a dense form in most biological systems. |
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Until results of the biological test are satisfactory, the sterilizer should be quarantined. |
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There is probably a biological reason why, no matter how desperate one is to do a poo, one always has to have a wee wee first. |
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It is abstracted and indexed in a wide array of major social science sources but these are less commonly used by the biological sciences. |
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Quadrotors could also use sensors to detect radiation levels and other biological hazards, he said. |
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The intensity of and absorption in play finds no explanation in biological analysis. |
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Protein molecules are large biological polymers of small molecules called amino acids, and each protein has a unique amino-acid sequence. |
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Measuring the isotopic ratios on Mars will provide clues about possible biological activity. |
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Dust and construction materials, such as wood, wallboard, and insulation, contain nutrients that allow biological pollutants to grow. |
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But no cabinet level decision to abandon offensive biological warfare was ever taken. |
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We observe biological examples ranging from the foraging bee's waggle dance to the genetic code. |
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Another equally important anthropological question is how biological distinctions are made symbolically and socially meaningful. |
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The capacity of radars to detect biological scatterers in the aerosphere has been known for 50 years. |
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Our guest of honour is that biological rarity, a hereditary peer who has attained high distinction. |
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Under this general law, for instance, one way babies become adoptable is by the consent of their biological parents. |
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For example, the author suggests that an adolescent girl's self esteem is an internal biological process. |
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The most common biological treatment system that also provides storage is the anaerobic lagoon. |
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Biological species status is more complex, and application of the biological species concept to allopatric populations is problematic. |
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Rearing methods are being developed for green lacewings so that they may be used in biological control of aphids. |
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People have been speculating about biological weapons falling into the wrong hands for decades now. |
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Day length is a stable seasonal cue and controls biological changes in a host of species. |
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The development of on-chip microfluidics will also be needed to increase response time, especially in biological applications. |
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Another method of monitoring watering needs is to use a biological indicator plant such as impatiens, ajuga, or coleus. |
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Genetic engineering will become a biological weapon used for agro-terrorism. |
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The new Cartesianism of cognitive science and biological anthropology provide some contemporary exemplars. |
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Police guarded key sites in New York, on alert for possible truck bombs, suicide bombers and chemical and biological attack. |
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It should be mentioned that the bulk of reduced carbon on Earth is sediment-bound kerogen, which most probably is of biological origin. |
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Lipids provide material for respiration and energy production, and serve as vitamins, hormones and structural components of biological membranes. |
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There are also biological treatment systems in which the biomass is attached. |
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My biological mother was a young, unwed college graduate student, and she decided to put me up for adoption. |
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This sexual authoritarianism is justified by a biological perception of sexual differences. |
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Any journal dealing with biological subjects will inevitably include discussions of issues related to evolution. |
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The above point reflects a deep tendency in Western societies to deny the reality of life as a biological reality. |
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Carbon is cycled through the hydro and geosphere through biological, physical/chemical, geological, and human activity. |
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In the early nineteenth century, the old British antagonism between Celts and Saxons was put on a biological footing. |
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Yet, they may find themselves caring for biological children, stepchildren, relatives, aging parents and a new spouse. |
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Scientists seeking to control the biological process of aging may also contemplate doing so through genetic manipulations. |
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The flexibility and adaptability of human behavior is because of human biological nature and not in spite of it. |
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The directors of the biological section installed cadres of Weismannists in the institutes under their direction. |
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In biological Weismannism, the genotype is the sole or primary developmental determinant of the phenotype. |
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Pavlov's studies investigated the way in which environmental stimuli inspired biological reflexes in animals. |
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Many officers have received training on how to handle chemical, biological or radiological attacks. |
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I just can't join the bandwagon of rabble-rousers determined to endow basic biological functions with allegorical status. |
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The nature of the biological processes driven by ATP binding and hydrolysis is, of course, highly anharmonic. |
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The Job Holder should be a graduate BSc or equivalent in an analytical chemistry or biological discipline. |
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We used modern biological extraction technology to obtain extracts of reishi, ginseng, wolfberry, peony, and licorice. |
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The precise mechanism of the biological actions of this plant is not fully understood. |
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From Spain he brought a translator who created a Latin summary of Aristotle's biological and zoological works. |
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Traditionally, scientists believed that aging was a biological process in which cells simply stopped dividing. |
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Despite their sleeping arrangements, they somehow managed to be the biological, legally wed, faithfully heterosexual parents of David and Ricky. |
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When individual animals seem unable to reproduce, keepers can call in physiologists to diagnose possible biological problems. |
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Annotation is the process of converting raw DNA sequence data into biological knowledge. |
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Terrence Deacon works at the interface between neurobiology, developmental biology and biological anthropology. |
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Like a nuclear bomb, a chemical or biological weapon is a weapon of mass destruction. |
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The unit is licensed by the MHRA to develop and manufacture biological anticancer agents for use in early phase clinical trials. |
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Equality feminists minimize the political significance of the biological attributes of women. |
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Ricin has the potential to be used as an agent of biological warfare and as a weapon of mass destruction. |
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Although this is not biological altruism, it is very close to it. |
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Gender roles exceed the biological circumstances of childbirth and they are, perhaps, much less likely to change. |
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Imagining novels as biological specimens creates a crazed and mythic zoology of hybrids, beasts, mutants, and aberrations. |
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Children of divorced parents are compelled to use their biological father's surnames, even if they live with stepfathers with different last names. |
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Vance's focus is on improving biological nitrogen fixation for alfalfa and other legumes as well as improving how plants acquire more phosphorus from the soil. |
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Consistent with benefits found with other adaptogenic substances, Rhodiola rosea appears to offer generalized resistance to physical, chemical, and biological stressors. |
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But because it is almost impossible to determine the history of a biological process, we may never know the role of the mitochondrion in the evolution of warm-bloodedness. |
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Unlinked genes may also be associated if biological processes, such as population differentiation, population admixture, and natural selection, occur in a population. |
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It stands for the proposition that the biological basis of procreation should also be the sole organizing principle of society. |
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I've never had any regrets and must have not come equipped with the mythical biological clock. |
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She grew up believing her biological mother had died after abandoning her as a baby. |
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She now made plans to marry and have a child just as her biological clock was ticking toward never. |
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In the Late Pleistocene, Beringia was a mosaic of biological communities. |
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Dihydrothymine structure is a well-documented DNA base lesion induced by radiolysis of DNA, and the biological relevance has been the subject of several investigations. |
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Motions along the first few eigenvectors are mainly large anharmonic fluctuations and generally can be linked to the biological function of proteins. |
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Ethylene is involved in many biological processes, like fruit ripening, flower and leaf abscission, senescence, many stress acclimations, and growth. |
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Eating disorders, on the other hand, are driven largely by biological processes that occur on the inside. |
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It is remarkable that this coupling between energy storage and dissipation has been observed not only in different adherent cells but also in many soft biological tissues. |
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Yet the group failed to produce any biological agent, and were reduced to poking bags with umbrellas to disseminate the sarin gas they were able to make. |
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This is a measure of how much of the emitted radiation is absorbed by biological tissue. |
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We also have a growing body of biological research showing that fathers, like mothers, are hard-wired to care for children. |
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And why is the government spending money weaponizing biological agents that are a danger to the public and are banned under the 1972 Biological Warfare Convention? |
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At the same time, they are the biological and cultural reproducers of the community and their bodies symbolize the body of the community and its boundaries. |
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This emphasis upon a shared European cultural and biological heritage allowed Anglos to claim the social privileges of whiteness for their Mexican spouses. |
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Genes and environment influence human biological variation from visible characteristics to physiology to disease susceptibly to mental abilities. |
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Most human biological variation is clinally distributed and blends gradually from one area to the next. |
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Owing to its location and geology, the state has high biological diversity. |
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This principle became one of Darwin's chief pieces of evidence that biological evolution was real. |
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Human evolution is the part of biological evolution concerning the emergence of anatomically modern humans as a distinct species. |
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If the wreck stayed uncovered any longer it risked irreversible damage from biological decay and tidal scouring. |
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The carbon enriches the organic matter in the soil while the biological control microbes provide an alternative to chemical pesticides. |
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Crocodylinae, all of whose members are considered true crocodiles, is classified as a biological subfamily. |
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Although they appear to be similar to the untrained eye, crocodiles, alligators and the gharial belong to separate biological families. |
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Conversely, various species of caterpillar are valued as sources of silk, as human or animal food, or for biological control of pest plants. |
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Caterpillars have been the target of pest control through the use of pesticides, biological control and agronomic practices. |
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The exact nature of biological and cultural interaction between Neanderthals and other human groups is contested. |
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Biological or physical anthropology studies the biological development of humans. |
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In contrast, archaeology and biological anthropology remained largely positivist. |
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Evolutionary anthropology is concerned with both biological and cultural evolution of humans, past and present. |
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Archaeologists and biological anthropologists criticised media coverage as sensationalist. |
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It was noted that direct monetary benefits from the biological control programme would accrue to pipfruit growers and the pipfruit industry. |
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Yet, their political institutional, and biological structures had more often than not thoroughly changed. |
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It makes little sense in indigenous terms to label some of these activities as social and others as biological. |
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As with most human biological processes, this specific order may vary among some individuals. |
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Conversely, menarche may be slightly later when a girl grows up in a large family with a biological father present. |
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For all practical social purposes 'race' is not so much a biological phenomenon as a social myth. |
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Certainly, genome downsizing would be a widespread biological response to polyploidisation. |
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About 14 areas of biological interest have been identified as possible hotspots for a National Protected Area System. |
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This term was used for all newborn beings without regard to their biological sex. |
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The precellular phase would involve astrophysical and geochemical activities at a time before the presence of biological cells. |
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The island is so large that it is considered 'nearly a continent' in terms of its biological distinctiveness. |
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In military campaigns, the Japanese army used biological weapons on Chinese soldiers and civilians. |
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This section represents rather fully the natural and biological diversity of Arctic sea islands of the eastern part of the Kara Sea. |
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In the centuries that followed, accusations and discussions of biological warfare were common. |
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By the middle of the 18th century, colonists had the knowledge and technology to attempt biological warfare with the smallpox virus. |
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Ethical, moral, philosophical, biological, religious and legal issues surrounding abortion are related to value systems. |
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The biological diversity, warm tropical climate and active volcanoes make Nicaragua an increasingly popular tourist destination. |
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Nearly one fifth of Nicaragua is designated as protected areas like national parks, nature reserves, and biological reserves. |
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This is because free iron ions have a high potential for biological toxicity. |
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Terrestrial snails are raised for food, while species from several phyla are kept for research, and others are bred for biological control. |
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Air pollution occurs when harmful substances including particulates and biological molecules are introduced into Earth's atmosphere. |
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Particular species of patents for inventions include biological patents, business method patents, chemical patents and software patents. |
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Nate has a biological and acculturated appreciation of beautiful women. |
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Her adopted daughter tried to suffocate a younger biological sibling. |
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There are good biological reasons why we have not become just superbrain, rational calculators, even were this biologically possible. |
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Weaponized anthrax is a biological terror weapon, whereas anthrax found in the wild is unlikely to cause a plague. |
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Qualitative biological and habitat survey protocols for wadable streams and rivers. |
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According to her, milk, like all animal protein, acidifies the body pH which in turn triggers a biological correction. |
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Nordmark's focus is on production of biological active ingredients and pharmaceutical drugs, which are sold worldwide. |
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It was unclear what brought the girl, who was being called Aliyah, and her biological mother to the same party. |
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A scaling law for the effects of architecture and allometry on tree vibration models suggests a biological tuning to model compartmentalization. |
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A molecular biological test was used for identification of the five periodontogenic bacterial species. |
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Its production also promotes and enhances biodiversity and biological cycles. |
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Intraspecific biological groups of acipenserine fishes and their reproduction in the lower regions of rivers with regulated flows. |
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On the first view, emotions are purely biological phenomena.... They are arational and amoral, like other natural bodily functions. |
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Breast milk is in high demand for biological experiments and a lot of facilities may resort to freezing to create biocollection. |
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I love my adoptive parents, but some day I would like to meet my biological parents. |
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Enzymes, the catalysts of biological systems, are remarkable molecular devices that determine the pattern of chemical transformations. |
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In the view of chronobiologists, individual biological rhythms are always regulated in a similar manner. |
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This has been known for centuries, but it was only twenty years ago that the site of the biological clock was identified. |
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The body dies in stages, beginning at clinical death, then brain death, biological death, and finally, cellular death. |
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He looked down at the puppy fast asleep in his arms. Maybe this furbaby would slow down the ticking of her biological clock, too. |
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Also, the progress of constructing ideal hyperaccumulators by using biological technologies is slow. |
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The Croonian Lecture is still awarded on an annual basis, and is considered the most important Royal Society prize for the biological sciences. |
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Expressed in biological formula, the habit of the plant is predominantly anabolic, that of the animal predominantly katabolic. |
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The biological dereplication tool may identify major knowns in a mixture, but it may miss novel minor components. |
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There is not yet a properly organized system of natural areas to represent and protect Louisiana's biological diversity. |
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Such a system would consist of a protected system of core areas linked by biological corridors, such as Florida is planning. |
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The river and the Barle Valley are both designated as biological Sites of Special Scientific Interest. |
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Other ways to classify medicines are by mode of action, route of administration, biological system affected, or therapeutic effects. |
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Other drugs included antitoxins, a few biological vaccines, and a few synthetic drugs. |
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Based on his microscopic observations of fossils, Hooke was an early proponent of biological evolution. |
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He was interested in morphogenesis, the development of patterns and shapes in biological organisms. |
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After the discovery of the double helix model of DNA, Crick's interests quickly turned to the biological implications of the structure. |
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The lecture is delivered annually in any field of biological sciences, with preference given to the areas in which Francis Crick himself worked. |
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Viruses can also carry DNA between organisms, allowing transfer of genes even across biological domains. |
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Evolution is change in the heritable characteristics of biological populations over successive generations. |
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However, this new approach was slow to take root in the biological sciences, the last bastion of the concept of fixed natural types. |
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Thus, exchange of genetic information between individuals is fundamentally important for the development of the biological species concept. |
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A style of trap that has been used extensively by researchers in the biological sciences for capturing animals such as mice is the Sherman trap. |
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This biological difference occurs because women have more resistance to infections and degenerative diseases. |
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This is frequently possible in certain areas, such as in the biological sciences, and more difficult in other areas, such as in astronomy. |
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Former weapons of mass destruction possessed by the United Kingdom include both biological and chemical weapons. |
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It is the sequence of these four nucleobases along the backbone that encodes biological information. |
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This theory was preceded by over a century where biological essentialism was the dominant paradigm on race. |
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A significant number of modern anthropologists and biologists in the West came to view race as an invalid genetic or biological designation. |
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Some researchers have tried to clarify the idea of race by equating it to the biological idea of the clade. |
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Some scholars have challenged the notion that race is primarily a social construction by argeuing that race has a biological basis. |
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A majority of physical anthropologists in the United States have rejected the concept of biological races. |
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Physical anthropology texts argued that biological races exist until the 1970s, when they began to argue that races do not exist. |
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As neutral markers, junk DNA cannot generate cultural, behavioural, or, for that matter, truly biological differences between groups. |
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Maugham publicly disowned her and claimed she was not his biological daughter. |
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These particles can be sedimentary or biological in origin and are responsible for the color of the water. |
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Moraine or till is the most common type of soil, covered by a thin layer of humus of biological origin. |
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Head-movement or biological or anatomical causes can also influence data analysis. |
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During her relationship with Kay, Duffy gave birth to a daughter, Ella, whose biological father is fellow poet Peter Benson. |
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The biological role for copper commenced with the appearance of oxygen in earth's atmosphere. |
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Research has been conducted on how to remove lead from biosystems by biological means. |
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Geochemical observations may help to deduce the global level of biological activity, or the affinity of certain fossils. |
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They then withdrew again with the next pulse of glaciation, eliminating biological diversity with each change. |
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Subspecific divisions have been suggested for both the Atlantic and Pacific herrings, but their biological basis remains unclear. |
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Munroe Barrow was committed to a mental institution in 1916 and, as a result, Joe knew very little of his biological father. |
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Clays, desert dust and biological particles may be effective, although to what extent is unclear. |
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The North East Atlantic individual biological stocks of Nephrops are identified as functional units. |
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This process, called the biological pump, is one reason that oceans constitute the largest carbon sink on Earth. |
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Zooplankton patchiness can also be influenced by biological factors, as well as other physical factors. |
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In biology, a species is the basic unit of biological classification and a taxonomic rank. |
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The evolutionary process by which biological populations evolve to become distinct species is called speciation. |
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The birds navigate through an innate biological sense resulting from evolution. |
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However, the biological effects of radiation due to radioactive substances were less easy to gauge. |
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Technetium plays no natural biological role and is not normally found in the human body. |
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Methane created from biomass in industrial plants via biological route is called biogas. |
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Marine environments are the home to many exotic biological materials that may inspire biomimetic materials. |
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An isoflor is an isopleth contour connecting areas of comparable biological diversity. |
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Most molecular biological evidence suggests that hippos are the closest living relatives. |
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This functions as an upward biological pump, reversing an earlier presumption that whales accelerate the loss of nutrients to the bottom. |
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Oceanographers divide the ocean into different vertical zones defined by physical and biological conditions. |
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Methanogenic archaea are responsible for all biological sources of methane. |
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Many trees produce resin, but in the majority of cases this deposit is broken down by physical and biological processes. |
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Generally genetic testing uses the word clade rather than species because a genetic test alone cannot define a biological species. |
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Such structures form by chemical, physical and biological processes within the sediment. |
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It can be a valuable indicator of the biological and ecological environment that existed after the sediment was deposited. |
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India passed the Biological Diversity Act in 2002 for the conservation of biological diversity in India. |
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The Act also provides mechanisms for equitable sharing of benefits from the use of traditional biological resources and knowledge. |
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Selective breeding of Rattus norvegicus has produced the laboratory rat, a model organism in biological research, as well as pet rats. |
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Most molecular biological evidence supports the view that bats form a single or monophyletic group. |
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As with all biological classifications of plants, this list can go out of date at a moment's notice. |
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Fungi are also used as biological pesticides to control weeds, plant diseases and insect pests. |
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The biological species concept discriminates species based on their ability to mate. |
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Mating experiments between fungal isolates may identify species on the basis of biological species concepts. |
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Research has identified compounds produced by these and other fungi that have inhibitory biological effects against viruses and cancer cells. |
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This has generated strong interest in practical applications that use these fungi in the biological control of these agricultural pests. |
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They grow on rock, walls, gravestones, roofs, exposed soil surfaces, and in the soil as part of a biological soil crust. |
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From a biological standpoint, water has many distinct properties that are critical for the proliferation of life. |
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Significant habitat destruction, increases in human population and poaching are reducing Africa's biological diversity and arable land. |
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He is credited with implementing mechanised land transport on the continent and conducting extensive geological and biological research. |
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The crew used a variety of dredges and trawls to collect biological samples. |
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Sigmund Freud introduced a transhistorical and biological conception of man and a view of myth as an expression of repressed ideas. |
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Due to the North Atlantic drift, the Barents Sea has a high biological production compared to other oceans of similar latitude. |
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Aside from environmental issues, simply withstanding corrosion and biological fouling pose engineering challenges. |
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Hence their biological rhythms tend to occur in rough multiples of this period. |
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Similar to CFCs, SF6 is also an inert gas and is not affected by oceanic chemical or biological activities. |
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Pulses of upwelling in the Benguela system regularly have a duration of 10 days, an optimal period for biological production. |
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These rocks can preserve a record of the field if it is not later erased by chemical, physical or biological change. |
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Thus, it is clear that the Cape Floristic Region has both economic and intrinsic biological value as a biodiversity hotspot. |
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This causes an increase in biological productivity toward the east, across the Continental Shelf. |
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A climate model is a representation of the physical, chemical and biological processes that affect the climate system. |
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And grandson Charles would have found Erasmus's book Zoonomia very handy with regard to his biological studies and theories of evolution. |
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A fair amount of it is biological, but a lot of it is also circumstantial. |
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The Jequirity bean bracelets carry a chemical similar to biological warfare chemical ricin in the deadly seeds which form part of the jewellery. |
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Changes in the level of hormones in the subject organism were estimated by the method of radioimmunity analysis of biological liquid. |
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Ketotifen is similar to sodium cromoglycate in its biological profile and may be useful in some cases. |
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ApoE is a 35 kilodalton glycosylated protein with multiple biological properties. |
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Thiols groups in proteins as endogenous reductants to determine glutathione-protein mixed disulphides in biological systems. |
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George Engel made a landmark contribution to medicine when he argued against biological reductionism. |
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Avidin is a biological molecule that binds with extremely high affinity to the small molecule biotin. |
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I head to the ladies' room several times a day when there is no biological necessity. |
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Alterations of proteasome function have been recorded in various biological phenomena including ageing and replicative senescence. |
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Biodegradation is determined by respirometry testing that measures the carbon dioxide output of a closed biological system. |
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When needed, the dried sperm pellet could be resuspended in a drop of biological fluid similar to that in which human eggs are held. |
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The determination of retainable phosphorus, relative biological availability, and relative biological value of phosphorus sources for broilers. |
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The biological significance of relationships between Barrow's Goldeneye occurrence and other habitat features are less obvious. |
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Progress in understanding the biological functions of RNA requires that investigators are up to date in the advances of many fields. |
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Potential biological control of weed in rice fields by allelopathy of dwarf lilyturf plants. |
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It was the sort of biological equivalent of a Belisha beacon warning of lunchtime chips ahead. |
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The specifics of the finds are grouped in sections on ceramic vessels struck lithics, small finds, and biological remains. |
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The action of the sesquiterpenic benzoquinone, perezone, on electron transport in biological membranes. |
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Arianoutsou M, Rundel PW, Berry WL Serpentine endemics as biological indicators of soil elemental concentrations. |
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Use of the Goldberg refractometer as a salinometer for biological and geological field work. |
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She is a biogeochemist, which means she studies the biological and chemical processes in specific natural environments. |
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People have a biological clock deep in the brain and different clocks in various parts of the body. |
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For years, you see, lots of studies documented the female biological clock. |
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Since humans are biologicalls diurnal, staying up at night can disrupt the body's biological clocks. |
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Now that we've found it, we can explore more deeply how our biological clocks malfunction as we get older and develop chronic illness. |
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It may explain why call centre workers, whose biological clocks are often out of sync, are at greater risk of obesity and insulin resistance. |
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The second step shows us how essential it is to live in harmony with our biological clocks and follow our personal rhythm. |
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Research by Welsh scientists has for the first time linked autism to genes associated with timing and biological clocks. |
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More women in their 30s and 40s, hearing their biological clocks, are choosing to give birth despite their single status. |
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Summers suggested that one of the main obstacles to their tenure tracks was their biological clocks. |
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But for plums, the extent of the natural flora's potential for biological control of fruit decay remains largely unknown. |
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The national BMSB research team will be aided in its planning for deployment and evaluation of a biological control program for this pest. |
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One of integrated pest management measures is biological control which is among the most efficient and saving methods. |
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Four insect species were approved for release as biological control agents. |
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There is no explicit dialogue regarding biological determinism or discernable study of the psychological make-up of the protagonist. |
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If adaptation or biological determinism is so strong, these policies would do little to raise happiness. |
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But after the man passed away his family contested the claim he was the biological father. |
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The court was hearing a petition filed by Rohit Shekhar, seeking its direction to declare Tiwari as his biological father. |
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You are the only one she has ever known but it is only natural she will wonder about her biological father. |
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In this situation, the man is the biological father, the surrogate mother is the biological mother, and the married woman is the adoptive mother. |
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She claimed that she had only wanted to give the baby away for adoption, with the consent of his biological mother. |
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Rowe, 50, insists that she is the children's biological mother but has admitted she used donated sperm. |
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Though Kathy is the biological mother of their two young children, Jennifer adopted them. |
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Rowe said she would submit to any testing to prove she is the children's biological mother. |
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A leading manufacturer of decaffeinated and specialty teas reduces biological oxygen demand levels with a liquid solid separator. |
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Adoption in England and Wales is the procedure by which a person who is not the biological parent of a child becomes the legal parent. |
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Generally, if the noncustodial biological parent consents, stepparents may adopt the children. |
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This is true even if the stepchild's other biological parent is dead, or destitute, or missing. |
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Collectively, the book reviews research from a variety of fields, including behavioral, cognitive, developmental, and biological psychology. |
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The Five documentary follows Dr Kelly's career from the labs of Britain's biological warfare research centre at Porton Down to the Soviet Union. |
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A biological attack is the most likely since screening for biological weapons is especially difficult. |
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Either those beheadings, or they be able to wipe out massive human casualties using biological weapons. |
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The biological response of a biosensor is determined by the biocatalytic membrane, which converts the substrate to a molecular product. |
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Biosensors have been recently used in medical, biological and industrial aspects to increase the speed of diagnosis. |
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Biosensors offer a label-free technique to measure molecular interactions by converting a biological response into an electrical signal. |
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Invista is building internal biotechnical capability to develop biological routes to its products and feedstocks. |
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Among these outcrops, 20 have yielded biological inclusions comprising the oldest representatives of several recent families of terrestrial arthropods. |
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Modernists argue that the uniqueness perceived by specific groups was based on common political and economic interests rather than biological or racial distinctions. |
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Changes to the ecosystems in both types of reserve are allowed to restore and preserve the natural balance, biological diversity and natural ecological processes. |
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