At the back of the house, granite walls enclose the west-facing garden which is in lawn. |
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The circle of light thrown by the flashlight was still hitting a granite wall, but a feet or two lower, it was not. |
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The Pre-Cambrian granite bedrock is exposed at higher elevations as outcrops or low cliffs. |
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Marble is much softer than granite and is highly porous, so it's easily etched by acids. |
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Had it sold at that price, it would have been the granite city's most expensive ever house. |
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Earthen materials like steel, metal and granite are hard to get these days. |
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The cloistered walkways of Cambridge Crematorium are dotted with granite plaques bearing the names of the dear departed. |
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The front garden is laid in granite paving and provides plenty of off-street parking. |
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She suggested that the Corporation could reconstruct the pedestrian pathways using white granite stones. |
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The pool itself is strewn with huge granite boulders that jut out of the water like ancient statues. |
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In places, they contain blocks and fragments of surrounding lithologies as well as isolated boudins of granite pegmatite. |
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On glass sheets balanced by tall and short stumps of unpolished granite lie beautifully crafted Viking-shaped candles. |
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The building is clad in Aswan granite engraved with calligraphic inscriptions representing the world civilizations. |
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At the other end of the park were Keith Edmier's two pint-sized commemorative bronze statues of men in uniform, mounted on granite plinths. |
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The sculpture balances over a large, shallow, black granite reflecting pool of slow-moving water. |
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The microcline and quartz are sometimes intergrown as graphic granite and become very coarse grained near pockets. |
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Odds ratios showed cows preferred the stalls bedded with sand 2.8 times more than the stalls bedded with granite fines. |
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Transportation costs, on a per-kilometer basis, should be similar for both the sand and granite fines. |
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I built two real catapults that would sling a 200-pound ball of granite and do it about 300 or 400 yards. |
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The plunge featured a forty-foot-high mass of granite boulders, toboggan slides, waterfalls, and observation decks. |
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The houses are built stoutly of granite and the mile-long main street is as broad as a Parisian boulevard. |
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Decomposed granite paths circle the fountain, and a sandstone path leads to the front door. |
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Everywhere there are clear jade rivers with deep natural pools, surrounded by sun-warmed granite boulders. |
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The peristyle is bordered by a double gallery with 60 granite and cipolin columns. |
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The contrary view, however, is that granite is a mixture of crustal and mantle sources. |
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On the ground he will place a granite slab recording the building's history. |
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At the Tileco warehouse they have all these precut granite slabs held together with heavy straps. |
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The dome, built of chiselled, rectangular granite stones and 110 feet tall, stands as an imposing structure. |
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Danny had blood orange carpaccio with pomegranate granite and lime and that was very refreshing too. |
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And it means living in palatial houses with exquisite tile, granite or marble flooring and owning plush cars. |
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As well as the four bedrooms, there is a living area with a granite chimney piece stretching to the ceiling and an open grate. |
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The traditional chimney breast in granite and yellow brick has a polished cast iron range in its hearth. |
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I spotted a chunk of granite in the shape of a bloated herring and grabbed it too, ready to do battle with both hands. |
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The kitchen is fitted with polished cherrywood floorboards and an excellent range of matching wall and floor units with black granite worktops. |
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But it was worth every puff, for the naked mountains were spectacular and intermittent sunbeams spotlighted the glistening granite peaks. |
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He says the granite water fountain troughs reminded him of his Uncle Vincent's piglets suckling at a sow. |
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Fairview is a 1,500-foot granite dome formed by glaciation, with a challenging, nearly vertical face. |
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The walls of the passage were solid and rough, hewn from the granite outcropping upon which the Citadel stood. |
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The New York Times reflects on the silver leaf lettering and the significance of the granite block, a herald for what is to come. |
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This event is also associated with production of late orogenic granite magma. |
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The kitchens have recessed downlighting, granite worktops and stainless steel extractor fans. |
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The kitchen, breakfast room and family room are open-plan and have modern units with granite worktops and a breakfast counter. |
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Every corner was adorned with precious wooden and granite carvings mounted on ornate pedestals. |
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The house retains its original twin windows and granite sills but is in need of renovation. |
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It was pale off-white, and had granite counter tops, and electronics galore. |
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Cut into the granite is a steep, gradually narrowing staircase, with some steps almost one foot high. |
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When steam and later compressed air were available for drilling the holes and dressing the quarry blocks, the use of granite proliferated. |
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In geologic terms the Vladaya granite is classified as a monzonite due to its low percentage of the mineral quartz. |
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A stair is cantilevered over the granite clad pool, drawing you up through the central well. |
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In some places, solid blocks of the stone obtrude from the granite pavement of the front of the memorial or from its curved base. |
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It was a glorious sunset, all crimson and gold, haloing the bare granite peaks and pine-scattered slopes that trailed down to the desert. |
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Thus, at Treblinka, the memorial to those killed consists of 17,000 granite shards surrounding a large obelisk broken down the middle. |
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The grey granite exterior is calculated to render the lodge almost invisible against the looming backdrop of the hill. |
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The first signs of human habitation date back 11,000 years, and granite wheelclamps have been found from the Mesolithic era. |
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A huge mound of square granite blocks can still be seen at the base of the Koppie. |
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Small pegmatites within the granite are locally abundant and have furnished a large number of minerals from pockets and associated vuggy zones. |
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Spend two days working your way up the 22 pitches of the Lotus Flower Tower, bivouacking alongside a sea of granite after the first ten pitches. |
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Those hoping to visit it are stopped by a granite wall topped with barbed wire. |
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He never tired of watching well-trained bird dogs search for quail, coming to an abrupt halt and freezing like granite statues. |
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At the underside of the sixth floor, the atrium narrows to a small opening encircled by polished granite voussoirs. |
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All cultured marble, onyx and granite products have a gel coat finish that provides a non-porous, stain resistant surface. |
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The coast line made a hairpin turn, and a jutting promontory of granite caught a small shingly beach against it. |
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The seabed here is made up of heavy granite pebbles and shingle, so the visibility is often very good. |
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Ambitious craggers had been spidering up Baffin's granite for decades, but none had ever looked at the walls with an eye out for skiable lines. |
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Some crystals grow to a much bigger size giving granite a speckled appearance. |
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And a block down the road is the Jeppe Street Post Office, an impressive building in light grey granite with tall attractive verticals. |
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Great granite cliffs reared up majestically all around us, the foreboding grey offset by sparkling ribbons of water showering diamante spray. |
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Both ranges are soft from age but covered in brushy pine forests, knobby granite crags, and hiking and biking trails. |
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Key design elements include cherry wood veneer cabinetry with granite stone flooring and countertops. |
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The materials describe the natural African environment, and indigenous wood inlays and local granite were used. |
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Finally, I rounded the giant granite corner of the traverse, relieved to find Ben in sight again. |
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What he did do was provide Hatton with a granite block on which to sharpen his skills and hone his experience. |
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Injected into the granite are veins of quartz with green fluorite, which are the source of the amethyst. |
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Suddenly, in the soft, slanting light of the midnight sun, they saw ice-polished slopes of granite come alive with images of animals and humans. |
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For the most part this area is decomposed granite laced with leaves and pine needles. |
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The granite rocks of the glacial valley contain quartz veins of silver, lead and zinc and at one time there were over 2 000 miners toiling there. |
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Since the composites are man-made materials, they do not have the unexpected variation of granite or marble. |
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The Council will soon start work to make Rawson Place traffic-free and pave it with Yorkshire flags and granite setts. |
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The sun caught a piece of quartz in the granite and lit the brilliance embedded there. |
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The statue itself is made from Portuguese limestone, but the plinth is of Wicklow granite and is sculpted by local man Paddy Roe. |
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The kitchen is stylishly fitted with Shaker cherrywood units topped by a black granite worktop. |
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Lacking foothills, it appears to shoot straight up into the sky, its jagged granite peaks floating above the clouds. |
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These granite dikes are composed almost totally of potassium feldspar and quartz. |
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The cobbles are dominated by pink quartzite, red sandstone and vein quartz, with minor granite clasts near the contact and rare green clasts. |
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He ordered thousands of watchtowers to be built 12 metres tall and 12 square metres at their base with 6-metre walls of granite joining them. |
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We rushed down a granite chute, our kayaks smashing through wave trains, and spilled into a quiet pool. |
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We all trudged down to The Hazards, which are a chain of weathered granite domes. |
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The porte-cochere piers are composed of granite bases, banded brickwork with 1-inch radiused returns, and limestone caps. |
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I recalled the way he'd raged at me, his eyes fastened on the old granite cliffs. |
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They went on the rampage pushing over marble and granite headstones and smashing family's memorials to their loved ones. |
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Why wasn't the granite washed clean like the rock outcrops we see jutting into the sea at the coast? |
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Not many appear to care for world prehistory wherever granite is available for quarrying. |
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The granite base is intact, and has withstood the constant ravages of time. |
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The result was a mix of old and new granite on the exterior of the existing building and an addition that created a consistently aged appearance. |
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I expect City of York Council will also think it appropriate to drill these meters into the wide granite kerbstones that line the street. |
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The kitchen features slick matt white units and granite worktops, while the south-facing bay window grants a view over the garden. |
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The kitchens are hand crafted, with porcelain handles and granite worktops. |
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The kitchen features granite worktops, cherrywood units, a walk-in larder and integrated Neff appliances as standard. |
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A breakfast bar has been incorporated into the kitchen's granite effect worktops. |
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In the kitchen, granite worktops are teamed with light beech presses, and a large island unit is used as a breakfast area. |
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Within the Grenville basement these are represented by alkalic to tholeiitic mafic dykes and alkalic to peralkaline granite plutons. |
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Good quality veneered furniture, reconstituted stone, granite sheeting do a job and will tick all the boxes for the discerning yet canny shopper. |
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The curve of the exterior wall is dressed in gray granite on which the alphabets, hieroglyphs and symbols of over 120 languages are etched. |
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These are topped with black polished granite worktops, with additional preparation and storage space provided by a central island unit. |
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Areas of granite and sandstone became colonized by maquis, a low, dense cover of ilex, briars, broom, tree heathers, and laurels. |
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Two virtually solid granite walls face the campus, while two walls of glass open up to views of the woods beyond. |
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About 250 years ago curlers discovered that the granite on Ailsa Craig made perfect curling stones. |
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The hallway was lined with black granite tiles and it felt slippery underneath my sock covered feet. |
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After a quarter mile, we turn off into a steep hillside broken by blocky outcrops of granite interspersed with snowfields and patches of green. |
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Just beyond the bridge is a little park, too rocky to develop, that rises in the middle to a rounded granite ziggurat. |
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The abundance of magmatic layering in this granite affords an unusual glimpse of early emplacement processes. |
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The pedestal or ground floor of the main building is faced with granite from Little Cottonwood Canyon. |
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Mullins' grave, covered by a large, brown granite ledger, is behind the headstone. |
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But it is not quite a cascade, either, since the narrowness of the granite channel gives it something of the character of a formal rill. |
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There was a limpid pool of emerald water rimmed with brown sand, set in a giant's jumble of rubbed granite blocks. |
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Natural granite stone walls provide seclusion, and the area has raised flowerbeds and a rockery stocked with a variety of plants and shrubs. |
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Words like courage, sacrifice and duty are chiseled on the architraves of granite pavilions. |
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Beneath it he created his own rose-coloured granite sarcophagus, and tended the flowers around it daily. |
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The large granite bowl was perfectly balanced on a rounded bottom, the slightest touch would tilt it one way or another. |
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All are carved from white granite and show a skill and artistry rarely seen elsewhere. |
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It's long been the received wisdom locally that this fractured slab of granite is the collection's most looked-for exhibit. |
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These would be foundations of granite ashlars on top of the rock on the first row of walls. |
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It is 120 feet long and 45 feet wide, is enclosed by cut stone granite walls and bounded by mature trees. |
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It is a large area of granite hills in which numerous pegmatites have been found through the years. |
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The northeast is a land of gently rolling tablelands interrupted by granite hills and rock formations. |
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The parallel blades of a gang saw may take a week to slice through one granite block. |
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The granite contains several inliers of tonalitic gneiss, including the Chikwakwa gneisses. |
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A large distinct granite ledge runs almost the entire length of the pool, while a mixture of tussocks and tea tree line the opposite bank. |
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A massive pediment with entablature is supported by four Roman Doric columns on granite bases. |
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She tapped her perfectly manicured fingernails on the granite tabletop impatiently. |
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Rob and I walked slowly along the rows of stark white granite tombstones, each engraved with a Canadian maple leaf. |
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This delivers a scramble over boulders and down the backside of a fairly impressive granite dome. |
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Because granite is melted rock, it has uniform properties, which makes it quite hard and resistant to scratches. |
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Externally, the granite curves of the building's toroidal form are carved with all the scripts of the world. |
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When the granite was being installed for steps and a retaining wall in the formal garden, Paul supervised the mason very carefully. |
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The east-facing back garden of number 26 is bounded by granite walls and laid in lawn with flower borders. |
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The views from these heights are simply stunning, with glacial ice fields and granite peaks as far as the eye can see. |
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Eight granite columns with marble Corinthian capitals encircle the baptismal basin, now much degraded. |
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This old granite house has, as the French say, its feet in the water, which seems to lap against the wide seaward windows. |
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I thought the barrenness was because of basaltic and granite rocks, and the greenery was due to rich soil after Ghodgaon. |
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In ancient times, the Thracians shaped the granite rock into building blocks at the quarry. |
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The powdered basalt, granite and other volcanic rock is a by-product of quarrying and hundreds of thousands of tonnes of the material is lying unused around Scotland. |
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At the back of the hall, the kitchen has quarry tiles on the floor, hand-crafted oak units, granite worktops, a tiled splashback and a double Belfast sink unit. |
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Japan's hot springs are volcanic in origin, Korean hot springs arise from granite underground and have lower temperature than the Japanese hot springs. |
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The granite peaks and sylvan hollows in the Blue Ridge Mountains are the results of geological changes and metamorphosis over perhaps a billion year period of time. |
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It is made from granite roughbacks and discarded drill bits. |
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After a three-day, porter-assisted trek to the 9,000-foot base camp, you'll spend a day acclimatizing, and then launch a 4 a.m. assault on the craggy granite peak. |
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Some have vertical slats of granite or wood to ventilate the interior, others have slotted slabs, and the pitched roofs are tiled or covered in stone pavers. |
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Above, the serrated edge of the granite ridge cuts through the cobalt sky. |
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In such a scenario, the leucogranite sheets might be interpreted to represent the conduits connecting the granite plutons through the migmatites to the granulites. |
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The heat radiated off the surface of the granite and onto me. |
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For the hard granite a chisel with a less acute angle is employed, and flat chisel is then used to smooth out the final surfaces of the stone and for undercutting. |
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The front rolled edge and curved radius of this striking two-tiered kitchen island can only be accomplished in solid surface material such as granite or Corian. |
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He felt his eyes straying to the Croce al Trebbio, the little granite column in the center of the piazza upon which a little bronze warrior proudly bore his sword. |
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Looking north-westwards from the summit, across the fjord-like Loch Etive, lies Beinn Trilleachean with its granite sweep of crags known as the Etive Slabs. |
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Anyone wanting an overview of the area should take the road that winds up to the top of Monte Mora, highest of the granite peaks that dominate the rugged, ragged coast. |
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There are 17 villas on a nine-acre site at Brunstane, each with five bedrooms, featuring natural materials such as terracotta, wood, marble, granite and leather. |
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He preferred the decomposed granite soil in the valley facing False Bay, claimed it, and named it Constantia. |
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We take all morning to climb the steep ridge, scrambling over huge granite boulders, taking care not to dislodge stones, which might hit hikers below. |
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I entered this gigantic granite jewel, which is as light in its effect as a bit of lace and is covered with towers, with slender belfries to which spiral staircases ascend. |
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He put it to the defendant that the granite post was a marker for disputed property and the defendant had removed it in a bid to claim the property. |
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On the ground floor the large, bright drawing room has a period granite fireplace and wooden partition doors, which concertina back to reveal the formal dining room. |
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The original granite stone sills have been cleaned and repaired, and the original chimney stack at number 3, while no longer in use, has been retained. |
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Outside on the plaza lay piles of granite still to be put in place, pallets stacked up on the grass, and more rolls of copper wire yet to be slotted in to place. |
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A sense of age is impressed on the visitor when first entering the house, with a hall that has a granite floor and a wood burning stove in a marble surround fireplace. |
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I headed up the granite and pine treed north shore of Lake Rosseau. |
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The building is surrounded on three sides by the pink-brown textured walls of old quarry workings, so that the archives are held in a granite embrace. |
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A flight of granite steps leads to a front door with a fanlight. |
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Other options are a scrubbable hardwood, granite or even marble, but remember the latter are very heavy, so check the strength of the frames before you order new worktops. |
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A porter stops to rest under the shade of a huge banyan tree, its trunk twisting out of the earth and its umbrella-like branches arching over a granite stairway. |
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The kitchen has fitted oak units, granite worktops and a tiled floor. |
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First, I would recommend that you use a granite or concrete block for your mooring rather than a mushroom anchor such as the one pictured in your drawing. |
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The entrance door and flanking windows are emphatically Gothic with pointed arches, the doorway framed in granite and the windows with granite sills and lintels. |
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The stunning yellow kitchen with its five ovens, flat and ridged hotplates, Aga, huge granite work surface and bewildering equipment is alien territory. |
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In the 19th century the greatest engineering addition to the bay was the construction of the Harbour with its two-tiered breakwaters or piers and wonderful granite stonework. |
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The granite contains abundant xenoliths of the country rock. |
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Pale brown to yellow xenotime and zircon are abundant as fine crystals up to 2 mm in length in many of the miarolitic granite cavities as well as in pegmatite pockets. |
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They have made their own contributions to it, particularly by changing the entrance front from the west to the east side and building a granite perron. |
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A spacious hall with original granite floor leads to a large dining room, with original granite inglenook fireplace complete with cast-iron stove. |
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Ride the gondola to a log lodge on the top of Winter Park Mountain and watch the alpenglow wash over the granite tops of the Indian Peaks, turning the clouds orange and pink. |
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It stands on a low and unornamented polished granite plinth in the centre of a small square of bluestone which sits flush with the surrounding turf. |
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The concrete car park is clad in black granite offcuts that are laid as coursed rubble to form a rough dark plinth to the red and white terrace above. |
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The granite sea wall, which is being constructed on the northern side of the port's main breakwater, will be built to contain basin sediments dredged from the harbour. |
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He matched two apparently similar granite intrusions on either side of the fault and argued that they had been displaced sinistrally about 100 km. |
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Eighteen stalls were randomly bedded with sand or granite fines. |
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The example from the granite at Lime Crest quarry is very low in magnesium relative to those found in rocks containing more ferromagnesian minerals. |
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The summit trig point is situated on top of the prominent granite tor. |
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Sheer granite peaks and deep cirques are drained by clear, cold streams. |
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It is painted in warm yellow tones and fitted with varnished tongue and groove floorboards, a picture rail and a fireplace with cast-iron inset and black granite hearth. |
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Set in a secluded meadow in Yosemite Valley against granite cliffs, the 99-room hotel of stone, glass and concrete melts into its remarkable setting. |
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The idea of placing atop this perfect thing a big granite planith surmounted by a representational bronze... ugh. |
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Claims in the Gilman area to the north of Red Cliff were being developed on steeply dipping veins in granite and on gently dipping ledges in both quartzite and dolomite. |
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The amazonite occurs in miarolitic cavities in granite as single crystals and crystal groups and is often associated with other minerals, especially albite and smoky quartz. |
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It is named after a granite boulder perched above the rocks. |
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Two hours east of Dallas, sun-drenched granite cliffs loom high above the cloudy waters of possum Kingdom Lake. |
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The northwestern parts of La Hague comprise a suite of igneous units ranging in composition from diorite to granite monzonite collectively termed the Northern Granites. |
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The Medieval section includes the famous Aby crucifix, golden altars, bejewelled illustrated manuscripts, triptychs, granite fonts, chalices, ivory and aquamaniles. |
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The granite fines were a by-product of crushing syenite granite rock. |
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A switchback ramp scales a battered wall of rough granite blocks and you wonder if defenders will appear on the ramparts above and drive you off with rocks. |
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Living in north Alton as a child, I played in the Confederate cemetery, both tree-shaded and open, green and lovely, with a granite obelisk monument to the dead. |
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A granite marker stone or milestone is preserved in Breage church. |
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It's just that there is a very large mountain in the way, with nearly impassable bamboo thickets on its lower flanks and nearly unscalable granite faces on its higher reaches. |
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As a young man, he was branded a black sheep after leaving his family's granite merchant business in Aberdeen and moving to Falkirk to launch his own firm. |
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The air was chill, the rough-hewn granite walls and vaulted ceiling glittering with moisture, streaked with soot from the sputtering torches in sconces. |
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Michihiro Kosuge is known throughout the region for public commissions in granite and basalt, often incorporating flowing water with the rough-hewn rock. |
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Sleek, functional liquid lines have light reflecting off smooth lacquer and granite surfaces, with tubular steel legs and accessories providing contrast. |
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The Similans are granite humps which rise from the clear, tropical sea. |
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The sand on its namesake beach turns gray as the sun dips behind the Two Brothers, twin granite spires at the far side of the bay. |
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It is built of rubble stone with ashlar dressings on a granite plinth. |
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At the granite contact, there is some evidence of contact metamorphism. |
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After that granite band is filled in, there are seven more blank ones on the next block. |
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Republican Scott Brown, the former Massachusetts senator now running in the granite State, is the best conveyor of the message. |
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He was told it had gone well, he said, and he has already received two more invitations to the granite State. |
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I was done with the book on June 30, the date on which 19 Hotshots died fighting a fire at granite Mountain in Arizona. |
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Beneath these lies a floor of coarse granite sand and broken shell. |
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This westernmost tip of County Galway, its small walled fields full of rushy bog and granite boulders, has always been a harsh place to scratch a living. |
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They stripped out the fireplaces in the drawing-room and second bedroom, and replaced the former with an art deco-style grate framed by mosaic tiling and a granite hearth. |
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Most of the intrusion comprises a coarse-grained, pink gneissic granite containing numerous augen of recrystallized perthitic orthoclase up to 1.25 cm across. |
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They tend to be smaller in scale, generally 2 or 3 storeys in height with the buildings immediately fronting a shared area, frequently with granite setts. |
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After the rain ended, we took a bottle of wine to a slab of granite rock just beyond camp for a sundowner. |
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White granite boulders were loosened from the surrounding hills, split using water saturated wooden stakes, and painstakingly shaped into building blocks. |
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A slowish, hooky tango with her granite voice slicing straight through with stiletto precision incision. |
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The granite rocks that form the peninsula were once continuous with the Tehachapi Mountains 350 miles south. |
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The brick and granite work was enlarged, the watchtowers were redesigned, and cannons were placed along its length. |
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These rocks are intruded by metamorphosed gabbro, diabase, and felsic dikes and sills and granite intrusions. |
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Now I suspect that the action of granite on this rock, has converted a part of it into this pseudo-jasper. |
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Rockall is made of a type of peralkaline granite that is relatively rich in sodium and potassium. |
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Within this granite are darker bands richer in iron because they contain the pyroxene mineral aegirine and the amphibole mineral riebeckite. |
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For this reason medium-grained granite is most adaptable, if it may be split and cobbed readily along rift and grain directions. |
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Among the igneous dykes cutting the granite are a small number composed of a unique orthophyre. |
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All the islands of Scilly are all composed of granite rock of early Permian age, an exposed part of the Cornubian batholith. |
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The granite can be seen at the surface as the Ennerdale, Skiddaw, Carrock Fell, Eskdale and Shap granites. |
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The granite which forms the uplands dates from the Carboniferous Period of geological history. |
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The moorland is capped with many exposed granite hilltops known as tors, providing habitats for Dartmoor wildlife. |
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The town of Wall stands today as it has stood for six hundred years, on a high jut of granite amidst a small forest woodland. |
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The Mersey Docks and Harbour Board used granite from a quarry it owned in Scotland for construction of the quays. |
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The centre of the range comprises a Devonian granite outcrop surrounded by Silurian and Devonian andesite lava flows on each side. |
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The landscape is principally granite moorland in the west, and chalk and limestone downland and clay vales in the east. |
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Towards the end of this period granite was formed beneath the overlying rocks of Devon and Cornwall, now exposed at Dartmoor and Bodmin Moor. |
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Heaviside also reportedly started painting his fingernails pink and had granite blocks moved into his house for furniture. |
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One of these granite columns is the largest such structure in the world, standing at 90 feet. |
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This comprises an outer ring of coarse granite and an inner core of finer grained granite, which was intruded later. |
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This granite was intruded into the Late Proterozoic to Cambrian metasediments of the Dalradian Supergroup. |
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Aberdeen granite was used to build the terraces of the Houses of Parliament and Waterloo Bridge in London. |
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The granite here is anorthosite, and is similar in composition to rocks found in the mountains of the Moon. |
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Stone walls are usually made of local materials varying from limestone and flint to granite and sandstone. |
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Quartz is a defining constituent of granite and other felsic igneous rocks. |
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If you look from Aviemore on a clear evening, the granite screes of Lairig Ghru and Braeriach do glow a warm red in the sun. |
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They are mainly composed of granite that has weathered into more rounded hills with many long scree slopes on their flanks. |
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An interesting feature on the mountain is the presence of several large partly buried granite boulders at about 800 m on the broad west ridge. |
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The Library is faced with Portland stone on the upper storeys which contrasts with the Cornish granite below it. |
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From 1830 onwards, most of the building stone was granite from Kirkmabreck near Creetown, Scotland. |
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The harbour, one of the largest in the country, is notable for its two granite piers. |
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A gneiss has visible bands of differing lightness, with a common example being the granite gneiss. |
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Quartz sand that is recently weathered from granite or gneiss quartz crystals will be angular. |
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The granite extraction represents one of the most flourishing industries in the northern part of the island. |
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Corsica was formed about 250 million years ago with the uplift of a granite backbone on the western side. |
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Corsica's main exports are granite and marble, tannic acid, cork, cheese, wine, citrus fruit, olive oil and cigarettes. |
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The continental crust consists of lower density material such as the igneous rocks granite and andesite. |
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Looking up the slope from below to the first hairpin bend, the granite basement on which the Graafwater formation rests is visible. |
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The Penwith peninsula sits predominantly on granite bedrock that has led to the formation of a rugged coastline with many fine beaches. |
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The geology consists of Hercynian granite with shallow podzolic soils on the higher ground and deeper sandy soils on the lower ground. |
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The Grade II listed house consists of roughly coursed granite with ashlar dressings and a slate roof. |
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The final mineralogy, texture and chemical composition of a granite is often distinctive as to its origin. |
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These are rare, because it is difficult to turn basalt into granite via fractional crystallisation. |
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The production of granite by metamorphic heat is difficult, but is observed to occur in certain amphibolite and granulite terrains. |
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The ascent and emplacement of large volumes of granite within the upper continental crust is a source of much debate amongst geologists. |
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Within two hundred years, the red granite has drastically deteriorated in the damp and polluted air there. |
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Cellars and basements built into soils over granite can become a trap for radon gas, which is formed by the decay of uranium. |
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There is some concern that some granite sold as countertops or building material may be hazardous to health. |
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Major modern exporters of granite include China, India, Italy, Brazil, Canada, Germany, Sweden, Spain and the United States. |
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Indian granite quarries have been mired in controversy over child labor and slavery. |
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Menkaure's Pyramid, likely dating to the same era, was constructed of limestone and granite blocks. |
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Rajaraja Chola I of the Chola Dynasty in South India built the world's first temple entirely of granite in the 11th century AD in Tanjore, India. |
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Imperial Roman granite was quarried mainly in Egypt, and also in Turkey, and on the islands of Elba and Giglio. |
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Beginning in Late Antiquity the granite was reused, which since at least the early 16th century became known as spoliation. |
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Until the early 18th century, in the Western world, granite could be carved only by hand tools with generally poor results. |
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In 1832, the first polished tombstone of Aberdeen granite to be erected in an English cemetery was installed at Kensal Green Cemetery. |
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As a result of the work of sculptor William Leslie, and later Sidney Field, granite memorials became a major status symbol in Victorian Britain. |
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Because of its abundance in New England, granite was commonly used to build foundations for homes there. |
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Half Dome, Yosemite, a classic granite dome and popular rock climbing destination. |
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The main exposed masses of granite are seen at Dartmoor, Bodmin Moor, St Austell, Carnmenellis, Land's End and the Isles of Scilly. |
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However, current understanding of granite pluton shape suggest that most are either laccolithic or lopolithic. |
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Over time the slate and sandstone rocks covering the granite were eroded exposing the granite in areas such as Dartmoor and Bodmin Moor. |
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As the granite erodes further, blocks of eroded granite known as clitter are left. |
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This is the largest exposed area of granite which also forms the easternmost development of the batholith. |
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The slow cooling gave time for crystals to form in the granite which are large enough to see with the naked eye, giving it a granular appearance. |
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The effects of this can be seen up to a distance of 4 miles from the granite in an area called the metamorphic aureole. |
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There are four recognised stages of mineralization associated with different conditions as the granite slowly cooled. |
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A cataract bog is a rare ecological community formed where a permanent stream flows over a granite outcropping. |
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They are created when ancient granite intrusions are exposed to weathering, as softer rocks surrounding them erode away. |
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North Uxbridge housed Clapp's 1810 cotton mill, Chandler Taft's and Richard Sayles' Rivulet Mill, the granite quarry, and Rogerson's village. |
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Blanchard's granite quarry provided curb stones to New York City and regional public works projects. |
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The area exhibits a profusion of distinctive rock landforms rising above the granite shield that covers much of Zimbabwe. |
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As well as passengers, the line transported granite between Beckfoot Quarry and Murthwaite crushing plant. |
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Also beneath the steep northern face lies the lower hill of Threlkeld Knotts, a granite hill which has been much quarried round its margin. |
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The granite was intruded into rocks of the Skiddaw Group and the base of the Borrowdale Volcanic Group. |
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He is buried beneath a large red granite obelisk of simple design on the southern side of Dean Cemetery. |
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Here the limestone Apennines proper cease and the granite mountains of Calabria begin. |
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The Cheviot Hills, in the northwest of the county, consist mainly of resistant Devonian granite and andesite lava. |
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