If sitting and listening is not your cup of tea, sightseeing in a drift boat makes for an interesting alternative. |
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As the characters drift toward a common fate, we see their pasts in luscious detail. |
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Many hurricanes eventually drift far enough north or south to move into areas dominated by westerly winds. |
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A little reverb here, a little wah-wah there, it all fits in beautifully allowing the music to drift along at just the right speed. |
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Most fishing is done from drift boats, because fluctuating water levels can make wading dangerous. |
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He had no choice but to ease his foot on the accelerator and let his speed drift down to about 20 mph. |
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Pits that run horizontally into a hill slope or cliff following material into the slope are known as adits or drift mines. |
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However, preliminary genetic analyses showed offspring admixture was probably caused by apicultural drift. |
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I find light lift under very thin clouds and drift quickly down wind in the 22 mph breeze. |
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If you don't spend regular quality time together, chances are you'll drift apart. |
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I usually do not drift off to that, but he is really a guy that has been very accommodating and helpful to us. |
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At bottom, then, the press conference reflected the general drift that clift described. |
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But you could afford to drift to the left of your readership as long as you maintained an agreeable tone about it. |
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She felt strangely weightless and ready to drift off with the next breeze. |
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Furthermore, disequilibrium is a good indicator of recent mutations, genetic drift, bottlenecks, stratification or admixture, and the demographic history of populations. |
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As the war clouds over India and Pakistan begin to drift away, we can perhaps afford the luxury of turning our attention to less life-threatening issues. |
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She may drift into the Sargasso Sea of daytime television, where she can chat up b-list celebrities. |
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Louie and Amia were perfectly happy to drift along, batting eyes at each other but never taking it to the next level. |
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As she got older, you could observe a drift in her writing towards more serious subjects. |
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And the ocean currents tend to drift westwards on the northern side. |
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Rather, their genetic distinctiveness is a result of centuries of low population size, genetic drift and endogamy. |
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Within Britain itself there was also more centralisation, and industry tended to drift to the south, leaving Scotland as a neglected fringe. |
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At the height of coal production, there were over 160 drift mines and over 30 shafts working the nine seams in the Blaenavon locality. |
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Several other small mines still exist, including the Blaentillery drift mine near to the Big Pit National Coal Museum. |
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He died at Rhuys on 29 January 570, and his body was placed on a boat and allowed to drift, according to his wishes. |
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Harriers hunt by surprising prey while flying low to the ground in open areas, as they drift low over fields and moors. |
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Various fishing methods, most notably purse seine fishing for tuna and the use of drift and gill nets, unintentionally kill many dolphins. |
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Eel larvae drift in the surface waters of the sea, feeding on marine snow, small particles that float in the water. |
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The agent of change could be anything from competition from other organisms, continental drift, or climate change such as an ice age. |
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The raw signal data was subjected to a baseline correction process to subtract the sensor's offset and drift variations. |
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Modern military submarines use an inertial guidance system for navigation while submerged, but drift error unavoidably builds over time. |
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Once an egg is fertilized, it is then planktonic, which is a collection of microorganisms that drift abundantly in fresh or salt water. |
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Some species, such as the auks, do not have a concerted migration effort, but drift southwards as the winter approaches. |
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The international ban on the use of drift nets has also helped reduce the mortality of seabirds and other marine wildlife. |
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However, the climate shifted and became more humid as Pangaea began to drift apart. |
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During the Paleogene, the continents continued to drift closer to their current positions. |
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Sea urchins graze on the lower stems of kelp, causing the kelp to drift away and die. |
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Curtains of vapor drift back to reveal the Americans, volplaning along well inside ten meters and only a little faster than the balloon. |
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The disowned of all parties, the rejected and foolishly bedrifted hither and thither, to what corner of Nature can he now drift with advantage? |
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Trapping of littoral drift sediment, preventing it from reaching downcoast beaches. |
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A bad man, being under the drift of any passion, will follow the impulse of it till something interpose. |
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He has made the drift of the whole poem a compliment on his country in general. |
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Diffusing particles experience a drift motion in addition to random diffusion, when an external driving force is applied. |
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In other cases, if the geology was favourable, the coal was mined by means of an adit or drift mine driven into the side of a hill. |
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Lights blazed down, but not too strongly, so that the dancers could drift along or jimjam in ecstatic rhythm, in a simulacrum of private worlds. |
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Weather systems warmed by the Gulf Stream drift into Northern Europe, also warming the climate behind the Scandinavian mountains. |
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Mechanisms that can lead to changes in allele frequencies include natural selection, genetic drift, genetic hitchhiking, mutation and gene flow. |
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Genetic drift is the change in allele frequency from one generation to the next that occurs because alleles are subject to sampling error. |
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This drift halts when an allele eventually becomes fixed, either by disappearing from the population, or replacing the other alleles entirely. |
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Genetic drift may therefore eliminate some alleles from a population due to chance alone. |
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It is usually difficult to measure the relative importance of selection and neutral processes, including drift. |
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Hence, in this model, most genetic changes in a population are the result of constant mutation pressure and genetic drift. |
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A similar situation saw Gervinho play in Van Persie rather than going for goal himself, only for the Dutchman to drift marginally offside. |
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The advantage of this method was that the effects of drift were reduced to errors in distance travelled, usually much smaller. |
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While genotypes can slowly change by random genetic drift, natural selection remains the primary explanation for adaptive evolution. |
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However, after a period with no new mutations, the genetic variation at these sites is eliminated due to genetic drift. |
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We'll mosey along toward the river. Kinder take it easy an' drift the herd down slow so as to let the cattle put on flesh. |
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Scientific settlements were established on the drift ice and carried thousands of kilometres by ice floes. |
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These variations in the Arctic all contribute to ice drift reaching its weakest point during the summer months. |
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There is also evidence that the drift is associated with the phase of the Arctic Oscillation and Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation. |
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Due to the North Atlantic drift, the Barents Sea has a high biological production compared to other oceans of similar latitude. |
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Seafloor spreading helps explain continental drift in the theory of plate tectonics. |
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When Alfred Wegener first presented a hypothesis of continental drift in 1912, he suggested that continents ploughed through the ocean crust. |
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The process of seafloor spreading helps to explain the concept of continental drift in the theory of plate tectonics. |
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Sea ice is classified according to whether or not it is able to drift, and according to its age. |
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The physical boundary between fast ice and drift ice is the fast ice boundary. |
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The drift ice zone may be further divided into a shear zone, a marginal ice zone and a central pack. |
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The term pack ice is used either as a synonym to drift ice, or to designate drift ice zone in which the floes are densely packed. |
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If two floes drift sideways past each other while remaining in contact, this will create a state of shear. |
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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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In addition, positive ions slowly drift westward and negative ions drift eastward, giving rise to a ring current. |
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Most paleomagnetic research in the late 1950s included an examination of the wandering of the poles and continental drift. |
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As genetic drift occurs more frequently in small populations, diversity is an observed consequence of isolation. |
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It is a common misconception that humans have stopped evolving and current genetic changes are purely genetic drift. |
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The water transported the eroded deposits north and south along the outer Cape's shoreline through a process known as longshore drift. |
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Newly hatched larvae drift northwards with the coastal current while feeding on larval copepods. |
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Drift netting is a fishing technique where nets, called drift nets, hang vertically in the water column without being anchored to the bottom. |
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Traditionally drift nets were made of organic materials, such as hemp, which were biodegradable. |
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When drift net fishing grew in scale during the 1950s, the industry changed to synthetic materials with smaller mesh size. |
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Any fish that crosses the path of a drift net in the ocean may be tangled or caught in the net. |
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When drift net gear was banned, manufacturers modified the design of the nets so they no longer fell under the banned definition. |
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Drift nets also are used in ecological studies in studying the downstream drift of invertebrates. |
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The wave pattern created by this water movement causes a convergence of longshore drift on the opposite side of the island. |
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The cyclic is used to eliminate drift in the horizontal plane, that is to control forward and back, right and left. |
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Events such as these contributed to a drift apart between the British government and many of its subjects in the Thirteen Colonies. |
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The earliest steam powered fishing boats first appeared in the 1870s and used the trawl system of fishing as well as lines and drift nets. |
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The reel was a wide drum which spooled out freely, and was ideal for allowing the bait to drift along way out with the current. |
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Thus, genetic drift is an exceptionally strong force acting upon the Y chromosome. |
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The net value of the latter predominates, resulting in an overall drift to the north end of the Red Sea. |
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At some point close to the magnetic pole the compass will not indicate any particular direction but will begin to drift. |
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The transportation of sand southward along the Atlantic Coast of Florida by longshore drift ends in the area of the Safety Valve. |
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During the winter, ice floes may drift south or north, depending upon the tides. |
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Anna, the map of her drift, and daily meteorological records, but the destiny of those who stayed on board remains unknown. |
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The expedition reached the sea but was unable to round the Chukchi Peninsula because it had to turn back due to thick drift ice. |
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Because of semantic drift, however, words in the same row may no longer be proper translations of each other. |
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In much of Britain coal was worked from drift mines, or scraped off when it outcropped on the surface. |
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The use of adits for the extraction of ore is generally called drift mining. |
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A drift follows the vein, as distinguished from a crosscut that intersects it, or a level or gallery, which may do either. |
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All horizontal or subhorizontal development openings made in a mine have the generic name of drift. |
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This section provides a very abbreviated snapshot of the drift mining information generally available. |
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By drift mining, miners were able to recover much of the gold buried under the permafrost. |
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Around 1900 the population of Nome was more than twenty thousand, many of them drift miners. |
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Nome's gold fields, appearing untouched from the surface, are honeycombed with tunnels left by the gold rush drift miners. |
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Lower down on the flood plain, the nature of the underlying ground is Magnesian limestone over alluvium and terrace drift deposits. |
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The medical profession, by its drift toward specialization, is handing the family doctor his hat and showing him the door. |
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They spray into the underground and it atomizes so it can drift a considerable distance, killing larvae in the water. |
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The captain stayed on the wheel, controlling the drift of his beamy boat so that we approached the wreck stern-to. |
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They also promote undetected spread of virus on farms and to live poultry markets and promote antigenic drift. |
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Rallyist, stunt driver, drift champion and television personality Tanner Foust will help host the Ford Focus Global Test Drive event, Feb. |
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The natural movement of the littoral along the coast is called the littoral drift. |
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There are numerous calculations that take into consideration the factors that produce longshore drift. |
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These formulas all provide a different view into the processes that generate longshore drift. |
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This sediment then enters the coastal system and is transported by longshore drift. |
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As well as dominant drift direction, spits are affected by the strength of wave driven current, wave angle and the height of incoming waves. |
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The majority of tidal inlets on longshore drift shores accumulate sediment in flood and ebb shoals. |
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Channel location variance and amount may also influence the impact of long shore drift on a tidal inlet as well. |
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The creation of ports and harbours throughout the world can seriously impact on the natural course of longshore drift. |
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Not only do ports and harbours pose a threat to longshore drift in the short term, they also pose a threat to shoreline evolution. |
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The drift occurs due to waves meeting the beach at an oblique angle, moving sediment down the beach in a zigzag pattern. |
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Spits occur when longshore drift reaches a section of headland where the turn is greater than 30 degrees. |
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The terminal groyne prevents longshore drift from bringing material to other nearby places. |
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Most revetments do not significantly interfere with transport of longshore drift. |
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During this epoch, the continents continued to drift toward their present positions. |
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In Britain, suitable wind conditions may lead to drift migration, and an influx of birds from the east. |
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Although some drift away to warmer regions during the year, their best survival rate is in colder climates. |
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This can be used to build up beaches suffering from beach starvation or erosion from longshore drift. |
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It stops the movement of the original beach material through longshore drift and retains a natural look to the beach. |
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Insects drift along with the prevailing wind, while birds are able to fly more independently of it. |
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The GPS calculated positions would quickly drift into error, accumulating to 10 kilometers per day. |
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The model builds on the concept of continental drift, an idea developed during the first decades of the 20th century. |
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Bostrom presented evidence for a general westward drift of the Earth's lithosphere with respect to the mantle. |
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Distinguished scientists, such as Harold Jeffreys and Charles Schuchert, were outspoken critics of continental drift. |
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However, his ideas were not taken seriously by many geologists, who pointed out that there was no apparent mechanism for continental drift. |
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These driving forces induce a state of stress within the drift ice zone. |
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It is a magisterial, doctiloquent guidebook, written with a care to ensure that readers never lose sight of its thesis or drift too far out of soundings. |
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Longshore drift is simply the sediment moved by the longshore current. |
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The time for a neutral allele to become fixed by genetic drift depends on population size, with fixation occurring more rapidly in smaller populations. |
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This drift is not the same everywhere and has varied over time. |
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Water is, however, an expensive item in drift mines opened on the dip slope of the coal, and underground hauling under such conditions is unusually costly. |
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But the Goswami seems to have got her drift and instead of bristling at her snub, he realized that here was an enlightened bhakta who had grasped the essence of the Lord. |
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As an example, the New Brighton spit in Canterbury, New Zealand, was created by longshore drift of sediment from the Waimakariri River to the north. |
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Other alternative theories propose that genetic drift is dwarfed by other stochastic forces in evolution, such as genetic hitchhiking, also known as genetic draft. |
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The neutral theory of molecular evolution proposed that most evolutionary changes are the result of the fixation of neutral mutations by genetic drift. |
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For example, the Arcachon lagoon is a tidal inlet system in South west France, which provides large sources and sinks for longshore drift sediments. |
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The impact of longshore drift sediments on this inlet system is highly influenced by the variation in the number of lagoon entrances and the location of these entrances. |
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For the next 14 years, drift mining placer gold deposits in buried Tertiary channels partially made up for the loss of placer gold production, but overall production declined. |
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Others are solitary, like the large ocean sunfish weighing over 500 kilograms, which sometimes drift passively with ocean currents, eating jellyfish. |
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As an example, the creation of a port in Timaru, New Zealand in the late 19th century led to a significant change in the longshore drift along the South Canterbury coastline. |
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Bureau of Mines published a study of eastern Kentucky drift mines as part of an ongoing research program to characterize the outcrop barrier zone. |
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Without the complementary process of littoral drift, the bar would not build above the surface of the waves becoming a spit and would instead be leveled off underwater. |
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Contrary to previous supposition, the evolutionary speciation of this genus is no longer thought to have occurred with the breakup of Gondwana through continental drift. |
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Beneath the drift deposits of the Vale of York lie Triassic sandstone and mudstone, and lower Jurassic mudstone but these are completely masked by the surface deposits. |
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Most countries regulate drift net fisheries within their territories. |
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The valley floor is made from glacial drift tails and moraine. |
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Glaciers forced the early human populations who had originally migrated from northeast Siberia into refugia, reshaping their genetic variation by mutation and drift. |
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Despite controls, violations of drift net fishing laws are commonplace. |
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So they go on in strange paradox, decided only to be undecided, resolved to be irresolute, adamant for drift, solid for fluidity, all powerful for impotency. |
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Water power was replaced by steam power in the 19th century and coal mines, mostly drift mines, were opened where coal from the lower coal measures outcropped around the town. |
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I don't really read French, but I can often guess enough to get the drift. |
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It appears, however, to have been partly derived from older Eocene deposits and it occurs also as a derivative phase in later formations, such as glacial drift. |
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We had two feet of snow fall, two days ago, but when I drove off the road about five hundred yards into the forest I lost my car in a twelve-foot-deep snow drift. |
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Sea otters live in protected areas, such as rocky shores, kelp forests, and barrier reefs, although they may reside among drift ice or in sandy, muddy, or silty areas. |
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Any drift from true time maintained on the ground is corrected daily. |
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These banks may slowly migrate along the coast in the direction of the longshore drift, alternately protecting and exposing parts of the coastline. |
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These currents are caused by the same waves that cause the drift. |
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While this method is used by a few drifters in rear-wheel drive cars, this technique is really the only way one can drift in a front-wheel drive car. |
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It is there seen that at a distance from the valleys of streams, the old glacial drift usually comes to the surface, and often rises into considerable eminences. |
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Between 1937 and 1991, 88 international polar crews established and occupied scientific settlements on the drift ice and were carried thousands of kilometers by the ice flow. |
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The model predictions that included oil behavior, advection, and wind drift helped link the measured organic aerosols to their source and mechanism of emission. |
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Satellite tracking of day migrating raptors such as ospreys and honey buzzards has shown that older individuals are better at making corrections for wind drift. |
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Ice that is found at sea may be in the form of drift ice floating in the water, fast ice fixed to a shoreline or anchor ice if attached to the sea bottom. |
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The drift ice serves as a breeding ground for seals in early spring. |
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The NCB agreed the development of a drift mine, which by 1973 meant that windings at Big Pit had ceased, with coal extracted close to the refurbished Black Lion coal washery. |
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They can be caught with drift nets and suitable trawls, but are most usually caught with surround nets at night by attracting them with lampara lamps. |
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Less apparent are ground moraines, also called glacial drift, which often blankets the surface underneath the glacier downslope from the equilibrium line. |
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The coal was drawn from drift mines in the sides of the valley. |
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Alternatively, and unlike fast ice, drift ice occurs further offshore in very wide areas, and encompasses ice that is free to move with currents and winds. |
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Typical methods for extraction included drift mining and bell pits. |
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Motoo Kimura's neutral theory of molecular evolution by genetic drift proposes that this variation accounts for a large fraction of observed genetic diversity. |
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Several of the terms in the table below have had semantic drift. |
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As selection and drift act independently on populations isolated from the rest of their species, separation may eventually produce organisms that cannot interbreed. |
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Aerial view showing an expanse of drift ice in southeastern Greenland, comprising loosely packed floes of various sizes, with a lead developing in the centre. |
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Aerial view showing an expanse of drift ice consisting mostly of water. |
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I'd have to be seven shades of stupid not to catch their drift. |
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Sargassum is commonly found in the beach drift near Sargassum beds where they are also known as gulfweed, a term also used to include all seaweed species washed up on shore. |
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