Soft microenvironments could be selected during the process of gelation as inert particles migrate through the forming gel. |
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These birds migrate from Mexico and, possibly, Central America to breed in the Chiricahua Mountains in the spring. |
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Many birds migrate, and many of the world's frogs, lizards, and snakes lie low during cooler periods of the year. |
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Anadromous salmon migrate into this river in July and August to spawn during October and November. |
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After synthesis in the bone marrow, they migrate to the systemic circulation and on to the lung. |
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In fact, if the birds were to follow loxodromes, maintaining fixed geographic courses, the vast majority would migrate towards Greenland. |
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Misconception number two is that fat cells migrate to treated areas from other parts of the body to keep an even distribution of body fat. |
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Many species migrate along riverside forests, some covering thousands of miles per year. |
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When animals migrate to mate and find food, they are at risk every time they need to cross a road. |
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In the fall the Lenni Lenape would migrate back to their settlements to harvest their gardens and prepare for winter. |
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One of the intriguing questions, only partly answerable at present, is why the birds migrate at all. |
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Blue Jays are year-round residents across most of their range, but some northern birds do migrate south in the fall. |
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Some Washington birds are resident, but most migrate either north-south, or up and down in elevation. |
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Unlike lampreys, salmon, and other anadromous fish, which migrate from the ocean to fresh water to breed, eels head in the opposite direction. |
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Pacific salmon are anadromous fish that migrate from freshwater to the ocean and then back to freshwater to spawn. |
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Other migratory fish are the twaite and very rare allis shads which migrate up the river to spawn in the spring. |
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The sockeye are very similar to kokanee salmon, which do not migrate and spend their entire lives in Redfish Lake. |
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Fewer than a dozen of those whoopers continue to migrate with their adoptive parents, but none of them has yet produced offspring. |
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Most Spruce Grouse do not migrate, but some do move short distances between separate summer and winter ranges. |
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The EU estimates that about 370,000 of those could migrate westwards in search of work. |
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Failing to get the vacant adjutancy Tolmer decided to migrate to South Australia. |
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Urban life is not a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow for those who migrate. |
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The situation is rather acute among blue-collar immigrants who migrate to the United States. |
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Third-instar larvae exit these webs, migrate to new buds, and construct larger, resin-lined webs between buds. |
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Astronomers speculate that some then migrate inwards, dragged by the remaining material in the accretion disk around the star. |
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Many small songbirds such as warblers, thrushes, and tanagers migrate at night. |
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The warble fly lays eggs on cattle in the Spring and Summer, and the larvae enter the animal to migrate through it. |
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When an electric field is applied, the white particles will migrate towards the positive charge. |
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There is some evidence that the phthalates in PVC can migrate into food, especially if the food is fatty or hot. |
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When an electric current is passed through this molten mixture, the aluminum ions migrate to the cathode, where they are reduced to metal. |
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The bison naturally migrate to Horse Butte during the winter to find food and escape deep snows. |
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Some insects, like the monarch butterfly, migrate to warmer climes in winter. |
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Banking and stock trading have the potential to be big moneymakers if someone can migrate users to the wireless Web. |
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Fibroblast-like cells migrate into the empty segments of the developing blastema to establish cell lines that later become myoblasts. |
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Magnetic cues, which help many bird species migrate, appear to be particularly important to Bobolinks. |
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The larvae migrate to the mosquito's mouth, and, when it bites another human, they enter the bloodstream. |
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Three-wattled bellbirds and bare-necked umbrellabirds migrate seasonally to this region. |
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Some siphonophores may reach lengths of over a meter and migrate up to 300 meters vertically in the water column in an hour. |
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In recent years genetic data has suggested that some male great white sharks migrate between South Africa and Australia. |
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What that metadata harvesting protocol really is fundamentally, is a way for metadata and pointers to data to migrate from one system to another. |
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During the harsh winter months, approximately 120 different species of bird migrate southwards. |
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The bogongs, I am reliably informed, normally migrate from Queensland to the Snowy Mountains in October. |
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Charged colloidal particles will migrate in an applied electric field, a process called electrophoresis. |
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One to five weeks after the grass seeds germinate, the mycelium, or vegetative filaments of the fungus, migrate to the lower part of the stem. |
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Sri Lankan Americans live in single family units without relatives, although relatives may migrate to the same community. |
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They also migrate through the interior in small numbers, spending time on lakeshores, alkaline ponds, and shores of sloughs and flooded fields. |
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In eastern Washington, most birds migrate south in the fall to locations throughout the southwestern United States and central Mexico. |
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The Argentines fear that if the narcos are squeezed out of Colombia they will migrate to the vast spaces of Brazil. |
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One or two years later, the smolts begin to migrate to the Pacific, where they live for one to three years before returning to the river. |
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In eastern North America, over two-thirds of breeding bird species migrate. |
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The lipid was found to migrate as a single spot under thin layer chromatography. |
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There she reportedly sells time-share accommodation to so-called ageing snowbirds who migrate south for the winter. |
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Mountain Quail regularly migrate short distances on foot, usually descending to lower elevations for the winter, staying below the snow line. |
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In fall the birds migrate south, many of them to the Extremadura region in central Spain, where they winter in huge flocks. |
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The small negatively charged molecules are able to migrate through the separation membrane toward the positive electrode. |
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The soft wrist phone was developed in parallel with the soft phone so that one phone module can migrate between both products. |
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Melanocytes derive from cells of the neural crest and can migrate throughout the body. |
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Beer brands are under pressure as young drinkers migrate from beer to spirits and baby boomers drink lighter brews. |
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Financial activities would simply migrate out of regulated institutions to shadow banking or overseas. |
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Aided by southerly winds, adults migrate from southern areas and appear in Nebraska in July. |
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Historically, creeds have developed whenever religions migrate from their homelands. |
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Sporozoites, the product of sporogony, migrate to the salivary glands and are injected into the bloodstream when a mosquito bites a person. |
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The sporozoites migrate to the salivary glands and are inoculated into a new vertebrate host when the mosquito feeds. |
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They are currently using microlight aircraft to teach the zoo-bred birds how to migrate south and escape the mountains in winter. |
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The goal is to establish suitable habitats throughout each watershed to allow the topminnow to migrate from one site to another. |
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They migrate along the inner face of the blastula wall to form a ring in the vegetal region and lay down calcareous skeletal rods. |
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A unidirectional current of water moving over sand moulds the sediment into a series of bedforms which migrate downcurrent. |
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But if the government of a Darul-Kufr allows him to observe his religious duties, then it is not incumbent upon him to migrate to Darul-Islam. |
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However, to the many more with no such hope, the only alternatives are to migrate or to embrace the illegality of the informal economy. |
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Little wonder that many women were reluctant to migrate to the colonies, just as some of their 19th century descendants resisted moving westward. |
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Many thysanopterans disperse over short distances or migrate over large areas, and mass flights are observed. |
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In many cultures people have multiple souls or selves that migrate from one body to another. |
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Wood grain PVC is considerably easier on the eye but after a decade the pigment will migrate and turn a greyish colour. |
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Even a relatively sedentary species can be listed if a significant proportion of its number migrate. |
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In late winter they migrate to selected shallow bays, forming congregations to pair and eventually mate. |
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As the stone progresses down the ureter, the pain tends to migrate caudally and medially. |
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The Helvetians had to migrate to the south-west of France and had to cross through Roman territories. |
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Warm-blooded animals are the only terrestrial creatures that live in large herds or flocks or that migrate long distances. |
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They then migrate to lymph nodes to initiate an immune response in the T cell areas. |
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Scientists have long known that magnetic poles migrate and in rare cases, swap places. |
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Nor is it clear when or whether Intel will migrate the products out of the home US market. |
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A protein in one solution might carry a positive charge in a particular medium and migrate toward the negative end of the matrix. |
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In the winter we planned to migrate to San Francisco, bringing all our beat furniture and broken belongings with us in a jalopy panel truck. |
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Those who want to work in their chosen fields often have to migrate to other countries. |
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Chuck-will's-widows migrate in Texas from late March through early May and will initiate breeding soon after arriving on their breeding grounds. |
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These waterfowl migrate early in spring and move northward from their wintering grounds as soon as wetlands become ice-free. |
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The pelting water bothers them, so they migrate to the dried fruit peel in the trashcan. |
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Iron, for example, becomes non-magnetic and may tend to migrate from perovskite toward another mineral as the pressure rises. |
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People in the red states who can think coherently are going to migrate to the blue states. |
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American kestrels, smallest of North America's falcons, migrate at about the same time as the jays and flickers. |
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After all, StarOffice is free, and is more about getting computer users to migrate from Windows than anything else. |
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Smaller software vendors in particular said they were unable to migrate applications to Linux, simply because they lack open source knowledge. |
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In an astounding effort, humans piloting ultralight aircraft taught a novice flock how to migrate from Florida to Wisconsin. |
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They are seasonal visitors which migrate to warmer waters when the days get shorter after the autumn equinox. |
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Around the same time, the sclerocytes located in the outer cell layer, ingress and migrate into the posterior portion of the inner cell mass. |
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Many arctic pinnipeds migrate with the movement of food, but also with the seasonal movement of the ice pack. |
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The Borrelia need plasminogen from human blood to migrate to the tick's salivary glands and then infect the human. |
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Cultural backgrounds become intermixed and paths blended when people migrate to towns and cities. |
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Last week BT confirmed its intention to migrate its national phone network to an Internet Protocol platform. |
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Males are found in the northern end of the range and migrate south for breeding. |
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Washington birds appear to migrate east before turning south and migrating across the Gulf of Mexico. |
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Furthermore, it cannot migrate or hibernate during winter, as is thought possible for some polar dinosaurs and turtles. |
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For instance, larger species may migrate in longer flights than smaller species for ecological reasons beyond the scope of my inquiry. |
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After incubation begins, the males migrate to molting grounds where they gather and go through a period of flightlessness. |
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They then migrate along the portal vein to the mesenteric venules, where they produce large numbers of eggs. |
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The profession of crop dusting often requires a pilot to be fairly mobile and migrate to where the work is. |
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An automatic translator was used to migrate most of the assembly code into C code. |
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For the oestrids that extensively migrate like the Hypodermatinae, the avermectins are able to kill both migrating and furuncular stages. |
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Other glycoproteins are thought to act during development to aid cells as they migrate to their proper location in the body. |
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Attracted by cytokines and growth factors, fibroblasts migrate into wound sites within several days of injury. |
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After being consumed by the bird, gapeworm larvae hatch in the intestine and migrate from the intestine to the trachea and lungs. |
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During human fetal development, the primordial germ cells migrate to and are incorporated within the developing ovary and are termed oogonia. |
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If this happens slowly, the gas bubbles will slowly migrate through the magma and degas. |
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In mammals, germ cells undergo a small number of proliferative mitotic cell divisions as they migrate to the gonad. |
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Gallstones can migrate from their primary site of origin in the gallbladder through the cystic duct and into the common bile duct. |
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You can watch eagles and loons, warblers that migrate here, dickey birds, and waterfowl. |
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After biogenesis, trichocysts migrate to the plasma membrane and are anchored to predetermined sites. |
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In places where there is no water for farming, men migrate to urban areas in search of work leaving women behind to fend for the old, and the infirm and the children. |
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Pain may migrate from the chest downwards as the dissection progresses. |
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As a result, the fragments migrate down the gel in various distances. |
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The lateral fluidity of the membrane allows oppositely charged lipids to migrate toward the adsorption domain to minimize the interaction free energy. |
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We want a system that does not allow ions to migrate through the coating. |
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When TMC went out of business, users had to migrate to different systems that had less sophisticated software as well as different hardware architecture. |
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He added that MIS is seeing more demand from users wishing to migrate from Windows-based Web server to Unix-based systems because of security concerns. |
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Stones may migrate from the gall bladder into the bile duct. |
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They migrate and winter along the rocky shorelines of the Pacific Coast. |
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Is it worth it to migrate to Las Vegas, which is said to be welcoming with open arms? |
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Voters who back Gingrich because they think he is a strong conservative might migrate to Santorum. |
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January and February are also prime months for spotting California gray whales off the coast as they migrate towards Baja. |
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The Essex Police wildlife officer, said fallow and muntjac deer migrate across the major route and are killed or injured by unsuspecting motorists. |
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When he discovered that some species migrate hundreds of miles a year, he began snipping minute samples of wing tissue from bats he caught in mist nets. |
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Anguillid eels are catadromous, meaning that maturing individuals spend most of their lives in estuaries or freshwater but migrate to the ocean to reproduce. |
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In the north Atlantic, harp seals and hooded seals, both ice-breeding species, already migrate to the ice edge in summer and currently form a part of the polar bear's diet. |
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Whatever happens, when the moment is right the mature inanga migrate downstream and spawn in grasses along river and estuary edges, covered by water at spring tides. |
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Dragonflies that migrate appear to build up fat reserves, wait for favorable winds, take rest breaks, and reorient themselves when they lose their way, according to the study. |
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Defense customers will need to migrate to new technology to enable the continued use of existing equipment and to foster interoperability with the rest of its partners. |
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Several barriers in his consciousness that normally stand sentinel around his impressions of women become pliable and my image begins to migrate towards that of his mother. |
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For a frost heave to occur, cold air must migrate through the soil layers where there is an area of warmer soil deep beneath the surface and plenty of moisture in the soil. |
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The larvae develop into the cysticercoid stage in the tissue and migrate back into the lumen of the small intestine, where they attach to the mucosa. |
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He also explained that in summer some herders migrate further up the mountain, moving into summer shacks, to let their cattle graze on better and different kinds of plants. |
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The grubs migrate through the tissue to the loin area where they encyst, cut a breathing hole in the skin of the animal on the back-line and complete their larval development. |
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The enteric nerve cells migrate following two pathways, one from each extremity of the neural crest, to implant along the whole of the vestigial gut. |
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They migrate throughout the enclosed space, forming an invisible barrier on metal surfaces which excludes the moisture and oxygen which are responsible for corrosion. |
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The whales migrate between their feeding ground in the north and their breeding ground in the Caribbean. |
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These agricultural pests migrate in mid-summer to the Rocky Mountains from Kansas and Nebraska to beat the heat. |
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But today only weedy species have the capacity to migrate and re-establish thriving populations in new habitats, which invariably are human-disturbed areas. |
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There is some question about the accuracy of these figures because it is possible that the windhovers migrate down to the lowlands in extreme winters. |
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When ice recrystallizes, water molecules migrate from smaller crystals to larger ones, thus increasing both crystal size and the probability of injury to the tissues. |
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Saar remains unmoved by the arguments that such ads will simply migrate further underground. |
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The merged firm will land up with two overlapping product sets that are difficult to integrate and a client set that will be unwilling to migrate. |
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Nevertheless many people who now migrate from the Third World do not do so out of choice, but because they are forced to by wars and political repression. |
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These organisms can reproduce, cross-pollinate, mutate, and migrate. |
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It is possible that faulting along the crests of deep-seated anticlines provide the conduit for mobile muds to migrate through to the seafloor surface. |
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Bars migrate downstream, producing tabular cross-stratified sands, and these merge to give sand flats covered by rippled and planar-bedded sands developed during flood stages. |
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The newborn larvae migrate from the host's blood vessels through the sarcolemma of striated muscle tissue, where they penetrate and encyst inside an individual muscle cell. |
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However, many small songbirds such as robins, thrushes, flycatchers and warblers migrate mainly during darkness, probably to avoid predators and to keep cool. |
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This crisis causes farmers to abandon their land and migrate toward urban areas to find menial work, or to illegally immigrate to more financially stable countries. |
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Cells from the ventrolateral dermomyotome migrate away from the midline forming a population of axially derived cells that differentiate within the lateral mesoderm. |
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Federal officials warn that the first case of bird flu could show up in the United States in the coming weeks or months as birds migrate from overseas. |
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Many native species migrate across the region, yet nobody can say for certain whether a 20m wide wildlife corridor is sufficient or inadequate for them. |
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To spawn, the fish migrate from large rivers and lakes into small streams. |
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Eastern birds may migrate south, but western populations are more often altitudinal migrants, moving from the mountains into nearby lowlands in winter. |
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During the fall and spring, many birds migrate along the river valley, and the Kittatinny Ridge is an especially important migratory corridor for raptors. |
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Entire generations often migrate between one pair of feeding and nesting areas. |
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Female chaffinches Fringilla coelebs in Eastern Fennoscandia migrate earlier in the autumn than males do. |
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Many tubenosed birds breed in the southern hemisphere and migrate north in the southern winter. |
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Many of the smaller insectivorous birds including the warblers, hummingbirds and flycatchers migrate large distances, usually at night. |
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Many shorebirds display migratory patterns and often migrate before breeding season. |
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Other species also migrate shorter distances away from the breeding sites, their distribution at sea determined by the availability of food. |
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Some seabirds, principally those that nest in tundra, as skuas and phalaropes do, will migrate over land as well. |
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The location of winter breeding areas is still unknown, since these whales tend to migrate in the open ocean. |
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During the 20th century BC, the Canaanite speaking Amorites began to migrate into southern Mesopotamia. |
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Operation Migration developed a technique for teaching precocial birds to migrate using light aircraft acting as surrogate parents. |
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A small population of humpback whales which has been poorly studied annually migrate to the islands to winter and breed. |
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The port city of Stanley has regained the islands' economic focus, with an increase in population as workers migrate from Camp. |
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Scientists have known for at least 50 years that Arctic terns migrate farther than any other animal. |
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This can exacerbate the global inequality in standards of living that provided the motivation for the individual to migrate in the first place. |
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The act is condemnable and he said that such acts should not create circumstance which can lead the Hindus to migrate from the area. |
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Users can set up a dual boot system or migrate their current operating system to a virtual environment. |
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The Witwatersrand Gold Rush of 1886 encouraged large numbers of Cornish miners to migrate to the South African Republic. |
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Northern pintails are pretty much homebodies that breed in the upper Midwest and migrate just a few hundred miles from where they were born. |
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Grey phalaropes breed in Greenland, Iceland, Siberia and North America and migrate to the southern hemisphere in winter. |
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Over the generations, those resistance genes can migrate into the old chestnut lineages. |
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The greater sand hills increasingly do not migrate, but almost all lessers do. |
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Sometimes, oil formed at extreme depths may migrate and become trapped at a much shallower level. |
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During the latter period, some people began to migrate to cities of the New South for opportunities. |
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He allowed Muslims to serve in the military and civil service on theoretically equal terms and allowed them to migrate to France. |
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In Nava City of Rajasthan where salt has been producing from the Sambhar Lake they migrate from Bikaner, Barmer and Jodhpur districts. |
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Eosinophilic granulocytes also migrate into areas of tissue that have been injured. |
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In 58 BC the Helvetii planned to migrate westward but Julius Caesar forced them back. |
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Its geographical range expanded and contracted with the alternating cold and warm cycles, forcing populations to migrate as glaciers receded. |
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The retreat of the glaciers allowed groups of Asians to migrate to the Americas and populate them. |
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Stem cells found along the surfaces of the airways proliferate rapidly in mice after viral infection and migrate to sites of damage. |
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The discovery of the flounder has shown it would be possible for the odd brown trout to migrate from the lake in the same fashion. |
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In recent years, very small, but with increasing rates, fin whales and humpback whales migrate into Baltic sea including mother and calf pair. |
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Genninomas, which are fairly treatable, arise from primordial germ cells that fail to migrate correctly in embryogenesis. |
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The favela is now the model for most of the world's cities, as vast numbers of people continue to migrate to them in order to survive. |
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Some researchers have suggested that the whales migrate into Hawaiian waters primarily in the autumn and winter. |
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The lesser snow goose and Ross' goose tend to migrate mostly on flyways west of the Atlantic Flyway. |
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They are what's known as an irruptive species, they migrate but not always in the same pattern. |
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In the second case, snowshoe hare declines in northern Canada and Alaska may force goshawks to migrate south. |
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This is seen not only in the tacit adoption of a Braudelian framework in which centers of gravity migrate from one urban system to another. |
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Many of these items migrate to the flight deck in the pockets and flaps in flight-deck clothing and flight suits. |
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The anodic passivators discussed here refer to inhibitors that enhance chemisorption of dissolved oxygen and migrate readily to the anodic sites. |
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Crews installed a temporary fish ladder so fish could migrate up the creek as they worked to improve it. |
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The image exerts pressure on the center, moves toward it out of its inertial mass, and will, eventually, migrate there. |
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The onset of oocyte activation are vitellus ink, release discharge and migrate into the perivitelline space. |
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However, vendors will continue to refresh their TWS product lines because many users are still reluctant to migrate to the PWS architecture. |
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Explosive decompression often occurs when high-pressure gas molecules migrate into an elastomer seal at a compressed state. |
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If cuprizone is then removed from the mouse diet, new cells migrate to the area that restore the myelin by becoming mature oligodendrocytes. |
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Neutrophils are the most abundant white blood cell in the body and generally are the first cells to migrate toward inflammation. |
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In East Asia, swan geese and northern pintails migrate along at least two flyways, the researchers discovered. |
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European Bee-eaters migrate through the Eilat bottleneck in both seasons in large numbers. |
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The young birds migrate southwards for great distances and have even been recorded as far south as Ecuador. |
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Many adults migrate to the west of the Mediterranean, passing over the Strait of Gibraltar and flying over land as little as possible. |
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The retreat of the glaciers 15,000 years ago allowed groups of humans from Asia to migrate to the Americas. |
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North American birds migrate offshore and south, ranging from the Labrador Sea south to the Grand Banks of Newfoundland to New England. |
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A 2009 study tagged 25 sharks off the coast of Cape Cod, Massachusetts, and indicated at least some migrate south in the winter. |
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When juvenile salmon migrate to the Pacific Ocean, the second host releases a stage infective to salmon. |
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Within a few days, the mussels migrate to the outside of the sock for better access food sources in the water column. |
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Some stocks migrate in large schools along the coast to suitable spawning grounds, where they spawn in fairly shallow waters. |
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Chub mackerel migrate long distances in oceans and across the Mediterranean. |
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Like other sea turtles, green sea turtles migrate long distances between feeding grounds and hatching beaches. |
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Since green sea turtles migrate long distances during breeding seasons, they have special adaptive systems in order to navigate. |
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The whale watching industry provides ecotourists and marine mammal enthusiasts the opportunity to see groups of gray whales as they migrate. |
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Because of their size and need to migrate, gray whales have rarely been held in captivity, and then only for brief periods of time. |
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During the winter, manatees living at the northern end of their range migrate to warmer waters. |
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In the wild, the marine postlarvae then migrate into estuaries, which are rich in nutrients and low in salinity. |
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There they grow and eventually migrate back into open waters when they mature. |
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North European loons migrate primarily via the South Baltic and directly over land to the Black Sea or Mediterranean. |
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Most gull species are migratory, with birds moving to warmer habitats during the winter, but the extent to which they migrate varies by species. |
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Some migrate long distances, like Franklin's gull, which migrates from Canada to wintering grounds in the south of South America. |
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They frequently migrate and remain alone for most of the year, except during mating season. |
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With the exception of the humpback whale, it is largely unknown when whales migrate. |
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Scientists believe that reduced sea ice in the Northwest Passage has permitted some new species to migrate across the Arctic Ocean. |
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The Romans feared these tribes were preparing to migrate south, closer to Italy, and that they had warlike intent. |
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It is speculated that brown bears were unable to migrate south until the extinction of the much larger Arctodus simus. |
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Elk and mule deer both migrate between the alpine meadows and lower coniferous forests and tend to be most common in this region. |
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During the summer, they migrate to higher elevations where food supplies are greater and better for the calving season. |
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In the Vedas, swans are said to reside in the summer on Lake Manasarovar and migrate to Indian lakes for the winter. |
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It is resident in much of its range, but some populations from the more northern parts migrate southwards in autumn. |
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Unlike the birds in sedentary populations that migrate, birds of migratory subspecies prepare for migration by putting on weight. |
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They occupy a great range of habitats where they are usually resident and do not migrate. |
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Earth's lithosphere is divided into several rigid tectonic plates that migrate across the surface over periods of many millions of years. |
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As the tectonic plates migrate, oceanic crust is subducted under the leading edges of the plates at convergent boundaries. |
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In July, some individuals mature and migrate back towards the sea, crossing wet grasslands at night to reach rivers that lead to the sea. |
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From there, young eels drift with ocean currents and then migrate inland into streams, rivers and lakes. |
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The silvering metamorphosis results in morphological and physiological modifications that prepare the animal to migrate back to the Sargasso Sea. |
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Plumes of warm surface water migrate onto the bank along its eastern edge, providing subtropical surface water from the Indian Ocean. |
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Once the females are mature, they will migrate to the spawning grounds and spawn. |
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Most of these species migrate back and forth across open oceans, rarely venturing over continental shelves. |
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During the day they hide in deep waters, but at night they migrate up to surface waters to feed. |
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These organisms migrate up into shallower water at dusk to feed on plankton. |
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They often stay together in schools and may migrate large distances between spawning grounds and feeding grounds. |
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After spawning, the herrings are depleted in fat, and migrate back to feeding grounds rich in plankton. |
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Though tuna migrate across oceans, trying to find them there is not the usual approach. |
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Large ocean predators, such as salmon and tuna, can migrate thousands of kilometres, crossing oceans. |
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The rate at which the teeth migrate forward depends on how quickly the anterior teeth abrade. |
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They frequently migrate through brackish water estuaries to freshwater springs. |
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These solvents, usually acidic, migrate through the weathering rock after leaching through upper weathered layers. |
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Once they enter such tissues, they can be difficult to extract, often exacerbating the problem as they migrate across the membrane. |
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A large proportion of New Zealand's aid goes to these countries and many Pacific people migrate to New Zealand for employment. |
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In 400 or 401, Hunnic raids forced many Germanic tribes such as the Goths to migrate Westward. |
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Italians were more likely to migrate to countries where they had family established beforehand. |
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While a few organisms can grow at the initial site of entry, many migrate and cause systemic infection in different organs. |
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While his general Rabtan took Taraz, and his main force forced the Kazakhs to migrate westwards. |
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The Buryats started to migrate to Mongolia in the 1900s due to Russian oppression. |
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On 22 January 1922 Mongolia proposed to migrate the Kalmyks during the Kalmykian Famine but bolshevik Russia refused. |
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Mongolia suggested to migrate the Soviet Union's Mongols to Mongolia in the 1920s but Russia refused the suggest. |
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The Kalmyks' main purpose was to migrate to Mongolia and many Kalmyks joined the German Army. |
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Marshal Khorloogiin Choibalsan attempted to migrate the deportees to Mongolia and he met with them in Siberia during his visit to Russia. |
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They migrate by following the natural cycle of grazing, and seeking water and shelter. |
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Those that migrate to the state mostly come from Chiapas, Veracruz and Campeche. |
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Seals migrate in response to these changes, and polar bears must follow their prey. |
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Strong tidal currents occur in the narrow channels between islands and reefs, and large submarine sand dunes migrate across the seafloor. |
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Fortunately, this kind of thinking will soon migrate from being passively stupid to being prosecutably malfeasant. |
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However, these peoples are extremely poor, and many migrate to other places to find work. |
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The prospect of independence prompted many to migrate to the Netherlands, especially from the large Hindustani minority. |
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The above assumes that the cooling process is very slow, allowing enough time for the carbon to migrate. |
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Studies of Swedish ospreys showed that females tend to migrate to Africa earlier than the males. |
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Only populations that breed in Arctic climates typically migrate great distances during the northern winter. |
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The fourth electron is free to migrate in the plane, making graphite electrically conductive. |
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It is partially resident, but many birds migrate further south, or move to the coasts. |
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Due to industrialisation in England, people began to migrate to the cities where living standards were often cramped and unsanitary. |
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The solution rids cantaloupes, honeydew melons and other produce of bacteria that migrate onto cut pieces. |
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Some, like the ait Atta nomads, still migrate throughout the year. |
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Wood ducks, which migrate more than 500 miles through Louisiana, normally lay their eggs in naturally occurring holes in trees. |
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It is also the earliest ambystomid to migrate to the breeding ponds with peak breeding activity in February and early March. |
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The bridge made it easier for animals and plants to migrate between the two continents. |
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Once completed, hundreds of thousands of United States citizens were enabled to easily migrate Westwards into the state. |
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Humpbacks feed in polar waters, and migrate to tropical or subtropical waters to breed and give birth when they fast and live off their fat reserves. |
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Whales again migrate off Japanese archipelagos and into the Sea of Japan. |
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Several whales seen off Sakhalin and on Kamchatka Peninsula are confirmed to migrate towards eastern side of Pacific and join the larger eastern population. |
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In traditional nomadic herding, reindeer herders migrate with their herds between coast and inland areas according to an annual migration route and herds are keenly tended. |
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In Wales, polecats were widely believed to migrate in large numbers every spring to the great peat bog of Tregaron to feed on the breeding frogs there. |
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Annual ice contains areas of water that appear and disappear throughout the year as the weather changes, and seals migrate in response to these changes. |
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It said the black grouse may become extinct within 20 years, the greater horsehoe bat would migrate north and the song thrush and common scoter suffer. |
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Cyprus is an important migration flyway for birds between Africa and Europe and millions of birds are killed yearly as they migrate over the island. |
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But in the late evenings they migrate to the shallower, streamy stretches. |
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They're also a fine place to watch boats being raised as they pass from Puget Sound to Lake Washington, or salmon as they migrate up the fish ladder to their spawning ground. |
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