The approximate locations of the major fissures are inferred from areas of relatively sparse pulmonary vascularity. |
|
Bohemian Waxwings breed in open areas and edges of boreal forests, often in places with sparse tree cover above brushy understory. |
|
This film is heavily influenced by the sparse sets and rigid character archetypes found in Japanese Noh theater. |
|
Layering multiple streams of electronically generated sound, he interspersed sparse and sometimes repetitive keyboard riffs into the mix. |
|
The two branch fork antlers are yellowish-red in the surface and have sparse, rough hair. |
|
On Desormais, the common denominator is sparse fingerpicking with little other accompaniment. |
|
It is conjectured that natural selection tuned the average connectivity in such a way that the network reaches a sparse graph of connections. |
|
The light shone dimly off the white wall directly across the sparse, small room. |
|
The subtitles were maddeningly sparse, leaving you with little idea of what was truly taking place. |
|
A cheap sound system pumped out drum and bass as a sparse yet expectant crowd gathered. |
|
The vegetation today is too sparse to support large herds of mammoths anyway. |
|
A hedge trimmed into a reverse pyramid shape will become sparse at the bottom from lack of light. |
|
But even that function is pretty meager, for only sparse audiences of curious spectators and hard core loyalists ever show up at their confabs. |
|
This resulted in a sparse, expressionistic film that is one of the best versions of the Scottish play in cinema history. |
|
Boulders gave way to eelgrass over sand in 15m then, at 24m, the eelgrass grew sparse. |
|
Mayfly hatches appeared to be sparse but trout were still taking artificial mayflies. |
|
It's a documentary short about the policewoman who mechanically directs the sparse city traffic, all to a techno beat. |
|
The research is too sparse to anoint a single best practice with anything like a cost-benefit efficiency rating. |
|
The section consists of calcareous shale with intercalated sparse limestone beds, dolomitic shales, and some dolostone beds. |
|
The sparse dialogue is as mind-numbingly declamatory and unsubtle as political oratory or operatic aria. |
|
|
Pak Rabun was padding along the mulch in the sparse undergrowth when he stopped and went tense. |
|
While wall paintings and perhaps stained glass introduced colour to otherwise gloomy, ill-lit interiors, furnishings were sparse. |
|
Also, apologies to parenthesis detesters and for sparse information of specific venues. |
|
Steep topography, sparse vegetation, and infrequent but intense thunderstorms typify many flash-flood hazard areas. |
|
The film's magical, mythic undertones are combined with a gritty, sparse realism that means things always err on the right side of sentiment. |
|
The song relies on some gorgeously orchestrated vocals over a somewhat sparse musical background. |
|
However I have been given a large number of old books recently and also have a goodish choice from work, so book buying has been sparse recently. |
|
This group is supported by the presence of sparse or early-deciduous stem pubescence and carnose leaves. |
|
The other two thirds of these cases are unassociated with asthma and have sparse eosinophils. |
|
They've also discovered the power of strings, bookending the album with sparse, poignant chamber quartet arrangements. |
|
The unmaintained tarmac turns into gravel and dirt, while the sparse houses have become more scattered. |
|
Skis were particularly well suited to travel through snowbound central Idaho, because the trees are sparse. |
|
We hope that the undergrowth of limitations is sparse enough to let the flowers of Oz grow unwithered. |
|
Most are tall, nondeciduous softwoods with pale smooth bark and foliage that's light, sparse, and usually blue-green. |
|
He has the sparse hairs of a soul patch below his lip and a tiny bush of a beard on his chin. |
|
Its website is largely brochureware with very sparse content on its product range. |
|
Airway vascularity was dense in intercartilage areas, but sparse in cartilage or membranous areas of the trachea. |
|
As we mentioned earlier, bluebirds prefer open rural areas with scattered trees and sparse ground cover. |
|
If you do selective logging, or harvest sparse and scattered stands, the mobility and speed pays off. |
|
Costumes were sparse, with the only indicator of femininity for Helena and Hermia an occasional handbag. |
|
|
Their subsequently published journals emphasized, in particular, the remoteness and sparse populations of the two regions. |
|
Here the population was sparse, tiny villages and small, often isolated manors close to the riverbanks. |
|
It wasn't that his sparse acne had miraculously dispersed into clear skin, or that he had suddenly buffed up overnight. |
|
The houses were big and the population sparse because they were so spread-out. |
|
There are very few actors who could carry off this film, with its sparse dialogue and total absence of voiceover. |
|
Large families and the practice of partible inheritance strained lands that under the best circumstances could only sustain sparse populations. |
|
There is nothing but dead rocks, a few sparse patches of grass, and an occasional pair of odd looking trees. |
|
There is nothing to warrant the supposition that the Bahamas ever had more than a very sparse aboriginal population. |
|
William Shakespeare's life is somewhat of a mystery to scholars due to the fact that most information that is known is very scattered and sparse. |
|
It's a sparse, spartan film, especially in its Scottish scenes and has none of the warmth of Ramsay's engaging debut, Ratcatcher. |
|
If the weeds are sparse, use that early spring energy to hand pull some of those perennial weeds. |
|
The bare patches around the goal posts with sparse, tired-looking yellow grass were soon carpeted green. |
|
Gopinath's words are slow and halting, as he reconstructs for us the sparse and humble details of his life. |
|
The Markhor is a goat-antelope found in sparse woodland in the Western Himalayas. |
|
The sparse, terse prose he employed was like a stiletto knife stabbing at the underbelly of post-war Britain. |
|
Although rather sparse by Hong Kong standards, when the hand-to-hand kicks in, it delivers the goods. |
|
Some hawthorns are especially prone to leaf fungal problems, and highly infected plants may become sparse. |
|
The dialogue is sparse and when the characters do speak, it's clunkily written, laden with insipid profundities, and often badly delivered. |
|
However, even in sparse numbers, butterfly caterpillars can damage ornamentals or food plants. |
|
With her sparse, hennaed hair and crimson lips, she greeted us with warm generosity. |
|
|
Because of its rarity the diagnosis may not be considered, particularly if osteoid is sparse. |
|
Gone is the sparse acoustic strum of a heartbroken Norfolk lass and in steps a more knowing soul. |
|
Mascara is the great Houdini of the make-up world, transforming lashes from sparse and stumpy to luxurious and lovely. |
|
The flora extracted from the underlying Maastrichtian chalks is sparse, but indicative of open marine conditions. |
|
Lucius moved quickly in the lead, darting through the sparse woods on a track used occasionally by charcoal burners and herdsmen. |
|
A sparse script and real sensitivity from the actors, none of whom overplay their role, only adds further to the film's power. |
|
A simple, sparse arena populated by a sundial and small bench gives the actors freedom to explore the text's complexities. |
|
Dialogue is sparse, so the humour is superficial, not character-driven, and shows up as glib one-liners. |
|
The sparse light that is coming from the lamp dances over his features, bringing out the strong jawline and the chiseled features he has. |
|
The Linux filesystem also supports sparse files, so swapfiles only consume the amount of disk space needed by their non-zero data. |
|
They fell a few hundred feet more before opening their chutes and slowly descending to the sparse vegetation below. |
|
If the instrumentation is more sparse, the music is no less symphonic in its scale and approach than we would hope. |
|
A short, thin-faced young man with a sparse mustache hustled around from the back of the van. |
|
The foothills were covered with white-flowering bogote trees, and rioting bougainvillea edged the dooryards of the sparse villages. |
|
In the midst of the night, this encampment in these sparse woods on the edge of Ther'kass was eerily silent. |
|
I dodged trees, oaks and maples and elms and the occasional sparse, skinny willow, in order to catch up with her. |
|
The cows also devoured native grasses, transforming the landscape to little more than lumps of cow pies and sparse vegetation. |
|
In the sparse, green backyard, sleeping at the base of a gum tree, lay Dennis, her orange striped cat. |
|
We add the caveat, however, that the data on waterbuck are sparse and dates of birth are the least accurate of all the species. |
|
On first listen it seems wearyingly traditional, raspy and sparse in tasteful, expected ways. |
|
|
Mammalian carnivores such as weasels and foxes catch voles by chasing or pouncing and are probably just as dangerous in dense cover as in sparse. |
|
The wagon was jouncing over a dirt road, more a slight wearing-away or the sparse brown grass than anything else. |
|
My carpaccio was passable, but far too sparse and hidden beneath a jungle of foliage. |
|
They are most disappointed as reciprocal support from the menfolk is very sparse indeed. |
|
Sweat beads the size of mushroom caps gathered beneath his sparse and kinky hair. |
|
He is two years old but his face is that of a wizened old man, his hair sparse and patched. |
|
Although the royal corgis weren't in evidence, there were those sparse looking patches of grass familiar to any dog owner! |
|
As his recorded legacy is rather sparse for a man of his large talents, I was elated to come across these two reissues. |
|
With its succinct, buoyant melodies and sparse angularity, Kirby Sideroad brings to mind Ornette Coleman's early quartet music. |
|
Beneath, pangolins lack scales but have a sparse coat of fur. |
|
It is nearly always the case for our equine heroes and heroines that the end of their racing career is made public in a sparse announcement to the press. |
|
For the earliest inhabitants of Southern France, practising a hunter-gatherer way of life, the natural resources were abundant and more than adequate for a sparse population. |
|
Rainfall in arid regions is typically seasonal and often intense and may carry an atypically high sediment load, due in part to sparse vegetation in sediment source areas. |
|
The homogenous and sparse population was replaced by the restless diversity, sprawl and cacophony of one of the fastest growing places in America. |
|
Vegetation is sparse above 1700 m, though various species of vegetable sheep thrive, and South Island edelweiss, gentians and hebes grow in sheltered spots. |
|
His energy in concert was quite inspiring, each song found him stomping about the stage, singing in a high tenor with sparse instrumentation provided by an acoustic guitar. |
|
At the tip there are sparse, fine hairs, and inside the base, where the seed is attached to the ear, is the embryo or germ, which will grow into a new plant if allowed to. |
|
The showstopper, a nearly 8-foot nude self-portrait, is overlaid with a sparse array of embossed, lozenge-shaped leaves impressed from both the front and back of the paper. |
|
As an impecunious artist myself, I have indeed had to learn to live by my wits, and by whatever sparse and sporadic income I can glean from my paintings. |
|
High flat rate payments merely encourage the nomination of placemen who may have little or no connection with the areas they represent and whose attendance may be sparse. |
|
|
The title track begins with a slow fade-in of sparse acoustic guitar above an undertow of bubbling feedback, as if it is the guitar itself which is summoning those sounds. |
|
Recent Late Jurassic paleobotanical data suggest that the large conifers and ginkgoes that formed the bulk of the canopy were both relatively sparse and nutrient poor. |
|
And in the big sparse invisible drops that fall early, with no wind, the new rice dances jade and silver, backgrounded by a slanting late summer afternoon rain by Hokusai. |
|
A surprisingly sparse paper trail offers only scattered clues on the obscure life of William Shakespeare, one of the world's most influential dramatists. |
|
The wrybill's close cousin, the banded dotterel, favours the sides of rivers, lakes, open land with sparse vegetation and coastal lagoons and beaches. |
|
Sally wattle, ironwood and beefwood dominate the very sparse canopy. |
|
These new finds double the age of the sparse fossil record for lorises and bushbabies, which with lemurs make up a primate group called the strepsirrhines. |
|
One has waited in vain for a comparable exhibition there, only to be disappointed by a scattering of shallow displays, rich in contrivance and sparse in substance. |
|
These cells are sparse but are easily distinguished from other epithelial cells by the presence of a tuft of blunt, squat microvilli on the cell surface. |
|
The Mund assemblage, on the other hand, contained no blades, and tools generally were sparse, consisting mostly of manuported hafted bifaces and bifacial scraper fragments. |
|
The stems tend to look leggy and sparse when they survive the winter. |
|
Songs here are lush with bongo breaks, Hammond organs, brass hits, sparse cuts of old school rap and the recycled wails of some painfully soulful women. |
|
Their sparse details and antic distortions are surreal yet recognizable enough to hit the target, whether it's a powerful politician or a basic human type. |
|
And if time permits we will discuss the case of sparse high dimensional data and the computational issues in tractably building very large probabilistic models from such data. |
|
But in his obscurity he's free to make sparse use of gentle wurring noises and allow intermittent glitches to engulf the beauty of his ukulele and string-laden folk songs. |
|
Species with sparse foliage are scattered in open areas and accumulated small or highly variable seed densities. whereas open interspaces seldom received any seeds. |
|
Yes, it's sparse and minimal and clicky, but far from cold and empty. |
|
Primitively clumsy and slow, with conical heads and pointed pink noses, sparse gray fur and naked ears, mature opossums reach the size of house cats. |
|
Ungerleider's sparse guitar style was accented with long bass solos. |
|
At a junction where the traffic lights had stuck on red a man in a flak jacket and combat trousers took it upon himself to direct the sparse traffic. |
|
|
Other than these sparse accommodations, there was a fourth door on the left of the hall that led to a rather dilapidated, disgustingly mildewed water closet. |
|
We can examine the population problem as our resources and space become sparse and evaluate our ecological footprints to ensure we are impacting the earth in a healthy way. |
|
The reasons behind sparse usage, however, are not far to seek. |
|
The second, or central, column crossed the Ebro at the oppidum of Mora and from there information is fairly sparse. |
|
But his friendly, short-sighted eyes and beakish nose were traditional enough, and his hair was sparse, as befitted a man of nearly seventy. |
|
The general neglect of the RAF until the late spurt in 1938 had left sparse resources to build defences. |
|
Their exact relation is difficult to determine from the sparse evidence of runic inscriptions. |
|
Old English borrowings were relatively sparse and drew mainly from ecclesiastical usage after the Christianization of England. |
|
The music generally features sparse, syncopated drum and percussion patterns with bass lines that contain prominent sub bass frequencies. |
|
Evidence for Roman settlement is sparse, although evidently the islands were visited by Roman officials and traders. |
|
The later Iron Age inhabitants of the Northern Isles were probably Pictish, although the historical record is sparse. |
|
The later Iron Age inhabitants of the northern and western Hebrides were probably Pictish, although the historical record is sparse. |
|
This period of sparse settlement included colonizers from different backgrounds. |
|
The winter fur is very dense and silky, but quite closely lying and short, while the summer fur is rougher, shorter and sparse. |
|
Because of the sparse evidence for the period, many interpretations are possible. |
|
In the 18th century smoking became far more sparse in painting as the elegant practice of taking snuff became popular. |
|
These hills appear to have been formed during the last ice age under permafrost conditions dominated by sparse tundra vegetation. |
|
In locales where gravelly soil is predominant, plant life is generally more sparse. |
|
Remote sensing of hydrologic processes can provide information on locations where in situ sensors may be unavailable or sparse. |
|
The fossil record of the Caridean is sparse, with only 57 exclusively fossil species known. |
|
|
Latterly, Orkney was settled by the Picts although the archaeological evidence is sparse. |
|
They live in a forest environment with patchy resources, and a male is unable to monopolize more than one female due to this sparse distribution. |
|
In winter, the fur on the back and flanks is long and coarse, consisting of bristly guard hairs with a sparse, soft undercoat. |
|
The belly fur consists of short, sparse hairs, with skin being visible in the inguinal region. |
|
The roe deer is primarily crepuscular, very quick and graceful, and lives in woods, although it may venture into grasslands and sparse forests. |
|
Samples from the megadrought times had little pollen or charcoal, suggesting sparse vegetation with little to burn. |
|
Darwin and his contemporaries first linked the hierarchical structure of the tree of life with the then very sparse fossil record. |
|
Vegetation becomes even more sparse towards the northwest due to low rainfall. |
|
However, sparse remnants of the earlier locative and ablative cases are visible in a few pronominal and adverbial forms. |
|
About 3000 battle axes have been found, in sites distributed over all of Scandinavia, but they are sparse in Norrland and northern Norway. |
|
The land between the lake and mountains was sparse, and the town itself exhausted every free patch of it. |
|
Although the population of northern Norway is sparse compared to southern Europe, the spread of the disease was just as rapid. |
|
Settlements are sparse, and these normally just contain small clusters pits. |
|
Archaeological evidence on worship of particular gods is sparse, although placenames may also indicate locations where they were venerated. |
|
Rainfall in Jeddah is generally sparse, and usually occurs in small amounts in November and December. |
|
Copies are sparse throughout the 10th century and for much of the 11th century. |
|
We drive sleepily into London along broad thoroughfares where to eyes fresh from New York the traffic seems sparse and Sundaylike. |
|
The author Roxana Robinson in her small writing room, deliberately sparse and undiverting. |
|
Prior to the 1850s, sparse groups of Algonkin peoples and lumber camps were present in the area. |
|
The metaphyses contained sparse, thin, bony trabeculae with retention of cartilage cores and few intertrabecular connections. |
|
|
Calypter yellowish with dense brownish microtrichae, margin with thin, sparse long setulae. |
|
With texturising ingredients and a root-boosting formula, sparse scalps appear more covered and hair thicker. |
|
The menu is almost as sparse as the seating arrangements with just chapattis and breakfast omelettes on offer. |
|
Her cinder block apartment is sparse and clean, and the red curtains create a rosy hue in the morning sunlight. |
|
The CGH signal was approximated by a piecewise function that has relatively sparse areas with nonzero values. |
|
Following an iterative strategy, the sparse coded representation is generated in which selected features satisfy the orthogonality assumption. |
|
Bartig views the Queen of Spades music, with its ostinatos and sparse textures, as the quintessential embodiment of these ideas. |
|
Owl's clover, for example, usually blooms in bunches, but this year is sparse. |
|
One song is full-on rock, and the next sparse percussion and keys with his vulnerably beautiful voice way up front. |
|
Gazanias will persist in the garden for many years when summer water is sparse. |
|
A little sparse on words, but skating gearheads will dig it and there's plenty cool to look at. |
|
For sparse matrices, a factorization may create excessive fill-ins of the zero entries, which results in significant memory and operation costs. |
|
It is characterized by large pinnate-pinnatisect leaves, sparse narrowly triangular petiole scales and caducous membranous indusia. |
|
The normally sparse intertubular connective tissue appears regionally increased in diabetic kidneys, but somewhat less in the protected group. |
|
In Quebec itself, the francization of allophones is too sparse to make up for the deficit incurred by inadequate francophone fertility. |
|
Quietly angry, beautiful and poppy, it showcases the band's mastery of sound, with the album by turns sparse, luxuriant and squelchy. |
|
Even popular Nags Head, with its nest of hotels and obligatory honky-tonks, is a sparse seaside town compared to resorts such as Virginia Beach and Myrtle Beach. |
|
The limited data on varenicline are too sparse to make any inferences. |
|
At the Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve, poppy plants have sprouted among the grass and filaree storksbill but so far blossoms are sparse. |
|
To date, rigorous studies evaluating whether treatment with antidepressants during pregnancy increases the risk of spontaneous abortion have been relatively sparse. |
|
|
Diagnosis and classification of intraocular lymphoma can be challenging because of the sparse cellularity and the characteristics of the vitreous specimens. |
|
Instead of gritty, sparse electronic, the brothers Schwarz have ventured into deep and often funky house territory, leaving a little of their signature techier moments. |
|
First brush down your brow hairs to find your natural shape and groom back, then fill in any sparse areas with light strokes to frame your face and add definition. |
|
From the inside out, Septime is unassuming and sparse in its decor. |
|
These intensity data turn out to provide reliable and invaluable information, in particular in places like the central US, where seismometers are sparse. |
|
Copenhagen-born but based in Berline, she's got a dreamy voice and Riverside is a haunting sparse piano-led track that sounds medieval and mesmerising. |
|
A fellow trolley pusher here is a gaunt little woman, her complexion screaming for a good moisturiser, her lankily sparse hair too long unpampered. |
|
Although scientific evidence for ayahuasca as a cancer treatment is sparse, patients continue to seek this age-old medicine from traditional healers. |
|
McEwan began his career writing sparse, Gothic short stories. |
|
Until the mid 18th century, economic development in Wales was restricted by its peripheral location, predominantly upland topography, bad communications and sparse population. |
|
To the south, the meadow steppes become more sparse, dry and low. |
|
However, the region's sparse population means that the more populous counties in the Willamette Valley usually outweigh the eastern counties in statewide elections. |
|
The anthropological notes in Columbus's letter are relatively sparse. |
|
Internet access in Sierra Leone has been sparse but is on the increase, especially since the introduction of 3G cellular phone services across the country. |
|
Between the stars lies the interstellar medium, a region of sparse matter. |
|
Desert shrub and desert grass, common to southern Arabia, are found in Oman, but vegetation is sparse in the interior plateau, which is largely gravel desert. |
|
Alternately, the variation in motor neuron number may be trivial and have little functional impact, because crustacean muscles generally have sparse polyneuronal innervation. |
|
In sparse contemporaneous sources, the leader or leaders of Rus people at this time were referred to by the Old Turkic title Khagan, hence the suggested name of their polity. |
|
Although the brown rat is now common on all of the largest Faroese islands, only sparse information on the population is available in the literature. |
|
Due to its sparse rainfall in agricultural areas, Argentine Patagonia already has numerous dams for irrigation, some of which are also used for hydropower. |
|
|
Some, in rural areas of Scotland, are small due to the sparse population. |
|
The sparse historical background of Arthur is gleaned from various sources, including the Annales Cambriae, the Historia Brittonum, and the writings of Gildas. |
|
For instance, the Wenhu Line of the Taipei Metro serves many relatively sparse neighbourhoods and feeds into and complements the high capacity metro lines. |
|
In addition, a sparse network of public bridleways and footpaths stretches around the area, often providing useful means of access from the lower ground onto the open hills. |
|
It's hard to tell the difference between a 5-gigayear, 8-gigayear, and 10-gigayear cluster for such a sparse object as this unless you've got very high-quality photometry. |
|
We extracted 30 sparse eigenanatomy components from the images. |
|
Scientific literature on coexistance of myxedema coma and NMS is sparse. |
|
The comic-book artist was renowned for his sparse yet evocative inkwork. |
|
Sparse rain and few natural resources historically have induced Cape Verdeans to emigrate. |
|
Laura's intangibleness is thus both affect and effect of the Canzoniere, evinced through its Latin title, Rerum vulgarium fragmenta and the Italian Rime sparse. |
|