Not good solid rain at all, just the insidious kind that leaches the warmth out of your bones and drags you down. |
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The Jets weren't going to suffer a mass of broken bones, torn ligaments and pulled muscles on his watch. |
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The skeleton is highly incomplete, consisting of hand and foot bones, epiphyses, ribs, vertebrae, the right ilium, and teeth. |
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These arteries supply the interosseous muscles and bones and the second, third, and fourth lumbrical muscles. |
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The discovery of goshawk and sparrowhawk bones suggest that some vicars enjoyed the aristocratic sport of hawking in their spare time. |
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However, the skull was superficially destructed so that several skull bones were visible through the disrupted bindings. |
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If an accident devitalizes the tissues and crushes the bones, it is difficult to save the limb. |
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But to do it requires strong devotion from the bottom of our heart and from the marrow of our bones. |
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Apparently not all breeds have a dewclaw and this why the average number of bones in the skeleton varies! |
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Her research will help diabetics whose impaired bones will not properly heal. |
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Altogether these produced a breakdown in the cellular structure of the body, evident in the putrescence of the flesh and bones of sufferers. |
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Piezoelectricity and pyroelectricity are fundamental properties of connective tissues reported for bones, teeth, and tendons of vertebrates. |
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Excessive consumption of soft drinks in childhood has been shown to lead to calcium deficiency and more broken bones. |
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The bones of legendary outlaw Robin Hood may have been dug up in the mid-18th Century, according to a history buff. |
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Piles of earth around the coffin showed it had recently been dug up, and it appears the decaying lid was smashed to get at the bones. |
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So measuring these elements will indicate if a group of bones are contemporaneous or of different periods. |
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This is because all the elastane and bones are firmly attached and don't really want to move once fitted onto a body. |
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You put some fatback, smoked turkey or neck bones in a pot and toss greens in. |
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Deprived of others, free solitude, like the astronauts' weightless state, dilapidates muscles, bones, and blood. |
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The researchers studied the size of fish bones to trace the historic collapse of the Atlantic cod. |
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Sabertooth tigers stalked giant ground sloths around the La Brea Tar Pits, and left behind their bones. |
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The secretion of growth hormone from the anterior pituitary stimulates the formation of cartilage and bones. |
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The other one's a grump and because of mistreatment being bred in its bones is just getting used to me. |
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For the saffron broth, cover the salt and fish bones with water and set aside in the refrigerator overnight. |
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Wounds were cleaned, broken bones were set, and medicinal emetics were administered. |
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Other scattered, disarticulated bones on the platform were oriented both east-west and north-south. |
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Richard is a struggling artist who makes no bones of the fact that he considers himself too good for the comic-strip job. |
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Every year over a million elderly people suffer the pain and inconvenience of broken bones. |
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Towards the ends of the long bones there are specialized discs of cartilage stretching across the entire bone. |
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No animal bones survived in the site's acid soils but pits, scoops and some 20 stakeholes suggested an encampment. |
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The bones are stained a dark red brown but otherwise display little permineralization, crushing, or distortion. |
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It transpired that the child had weak bones caused by scurvy and certain dietary intolerances. |
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According to legend this was the work of one monk after the bones were disinterred and moved from their original burial ground to the new church. |
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His fist winds tightly around my fingers until I feel the cracking of my bones. |
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The surgeon dislocates your elbow and stitches the piece of skin or tendon in place between the bones that make up your elbow joint. |
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In 1811 she saw bones projecting from the cliff-face and enterprisingly hired some men to dig out the block in which they were embedded. |
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I must confess I had no choice but to remove the rabbit's entrails and bones with my teeth. |
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It has become conventional-almost expected-that we should play the role of seer, cast the oracle bones, and examine the entrails of animals. |
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Stone Age communities sometimes exposed their dead instead of burying them and ravens picked the bones clean. |
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If I should accede one day to Heaven, it must be there as it is here, except that I will be rid of my dull senses and my heavy bones. |
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The creatures flew every which way, and there were several loud cracks as bones broke from their landing. |
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The bones crumble to a fine dust that whips past us, leaving only the forgotten fires still raging in the kitchen. |
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In 1984 his bones were painstakingly excavated to reveal a species on the brink of becoming human. |
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Scientists have unearthed the bones of a human dwarf species in Indonesia that existed as recently as 18,000 years ago. |
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The ochred unburnt bones were wrapped in paperbark ready for conveyance to specific locations. |
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The opercular is more often made up of one or more immobile bones which channel the excurrent from gills with individual covers. |
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If you act too weird, some sleazy carny operator's liable to try to dognap you and make you perform for dog bones. |
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The commish sent an investigator to pick through the bones and one year later, the results came through in the mail. |
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The other possessed an exotic beauty and a foreign look with high cheek bones and vivid green eyes. |
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The unity is not a matter of social politesse or cooperation, but the essential unity of those who share the same flesh and the same bones. |
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And Florie is legally blind in his right eye after undergoing surgery to repair severe fractures of the bones around his eye socket and nose. |
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I was just pressing the shutter button when the camera smashed bluntly, sharply into the bones surrounding my right eye socket. |
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He looked like a bag of bones so we gave him some of our dinner and he gobbled it down. |
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Underneath, were bones, weapons, spurs, a bridle, a drinking horn, a jet bracelet and a copper-alloy belt fitting. |
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With each flash a great jolt drubbed me till I thought my bones would break. |
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Within and under the mound were human bones from at least ten inhumations, flints, animal bones, and the parts of two Neolithic pots. |
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The patient had open fractures of shin bones, dextral pleuropneumonia, foreign bodies in chest cavity and chest. |
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Since achondroplasia affects mainly cartilaginous bones, the sitting height is normal while the standing height is short. |
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This is the fillet, a long muscle located underneath the bones of the sirloin. |
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What we've already got, courtesy of executive producer Jeffrey Lane, is a bawdy night of shticks and bones. |
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The bones which constitute the ankle are the two long bones of the lower leg, which articulate with a short ankle bone called the talus. |
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Death squads are operating with official sanction and running their own torture centres where detainees have their skin flayed from their bones. |
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Had the child before her been real, she would have flayed the skin from her bones with a thousand hungry spiders. |
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Occasionally, cats eat grass in order to clear their stomach of indigestible food, like bones, fur, and feathers. |
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Certain fractures of larger long bones, such as the femur, are hard to keep straight in a cast. |
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In long bones, such as the femur a more complex, spiral fracture is more common. |
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He says future biomechanical studies of fossils like the recently found foot bones could determine just how fleet-footed large terror birds were. |
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Even with all the FDA-mandated testing we have now, the trial lawyers flense the flesh from our bones when anything goes wrong. |
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Deeper in the dark glade, there are bones, countless bones, scraps of flesh and skin, cloth, and bodies. |
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However mostly in these classes I am trying to achieve a sense of flesh and bones, weightiness or muscle structure. |
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What do you imagine will happen when Jesus raises us all from the dead, putting muscle and flesh on dry bare bones? |
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Displacement of bones obscures anatomical details, but the fenestra ovalis seems to be absent. |
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The spirit of psychoanalysis is not confined to the skin, flesh, bones and marrow of psychoanalysis, but it is also not apart from them. |
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The blade cut through bones and skin and flesh, and slashed the ground as it cut through. |
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Much more scholarly research will need to be carried out to put flesh on the bones of this theory. |
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Leave toys such as kongs, rope chews, rawhides and even bones for dog to play with and use up time while alone. |
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The bias is historical, the anecdotes putting flesh on the raw bones of the past. |
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With that in mind, Mr Prescott was putting flesh on the bones of devolution proposals for those in commerce, trade, manufacturing and business. |
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But this powerful novel forces the reader on board, putting flesh on the bare bones of that well-known story. |
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There were a lot of details left to be sorted out to put flesh on the bones. |
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The play puts flesh on the bones of these divergent characters, as differences in social status gradually yielded to grudging admiration. |
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She bathed his wounds in a steaming infusion of sweet smelling herbs, and as they inhaled the steam, their exhaustion seeped out of their bones. |
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All these bones articulate with other bones and are able to make tiny interdependent movements, as well as bend or flex themselves. |
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Horsehide is made into fine cordovan leather, and glue is often made by boiling horse bones and cartilage. |
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Ruffian suffered a compound fracture of both sesamoid bones in her right front ankle and a dislocated fetlock joint. |
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I was half asleep, standing out in the freezing cold with nothing but a flimsy coat to defend my racking bones from the frigid cold. |
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In a successful transplant the new bone marrow migrates to the cavities of the large bones, engrafts and begins producing normal blood cells. |
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Those involved in the trade can make millions of rupiah from the sale of the bones, tusks, ivory and fur of the animals. |
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The depression was found in all the breeds studied, and in both sexes on the lateral sides of both cornual processes of the frontal bones. |
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Several bones popped, protesting the sudden movement after being stationary for so long. |
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The cortex of the bone becomes thinned leading to pathologic fracturing and distortion of the bones in the face and skull. |
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We've been reading the tea leaves and rolling the bones, and the signs and portents tell us, something totally wicked this way comes. |
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And you think that immersing your bones here will automatically result in your swift despatch to the heavens? |
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The band make no bones about acknowledging the soul, funk, and jazz roots of hip-hop without being pretentious posers. |
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Many had cuts to their face from flying glass, others with broken bones, many more were suffering from shock. |
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It was eyeless and had no ears, the folds of its skin creating the effect that its hide would fall from its bones at a moment's notice. |
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Judging from the number of bones, pine cones, leaves, and droppings, rodents had used it as a nesting place for a long time. |
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The sutures are, in effect, grooves between the bones of the skull and the fontanelles are small areas where the sutures meet. |
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The number of cattle bones is said to be uniquely large for an Iron Age burial in Britain. |
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For the sake of simplicity we will not address the bones of the wrist and paw in our study of the forelimb and girdle. |
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A needle is then introduced between these bones and the special liquid is injected. |
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Stress fractures in our study, except for one involving the lumbar spine, were located in the tibial, fibular, metatarsal, and navicular bones. |
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The horse became lame again and surgery was performed to sever the tendons in both front legs to relieve pressure on his coffin bones. |
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The sternum had been split open, the innards eaten, the legs pulled inside out, and the bones picked clean, ribs snapped off at the spine. |
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Small fish bones, delicate leaves, even animal skin have been fossilized and beautifully preserved. |
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Fossilized bones say nothing about external layers, and skin and clothes don't fossilize well. |
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In all but the most extraordinary conditions, pneumatized bones are the only traces of the respiratory system that fossilize. |
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Even more remarkable than the evidence of prehistoric man was the discovery of thousands of fossilised animal bones. |
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The bandages on his face peeled off, and the bones suddenly cracked back into alignment, and his nose cricked into place. |
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It contains three tiny bones that move when sounds reach them, transmitting the sound waves through the middle ear to the inner ear. |
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In the middle ear are three tiny lever-like bones that carry sound vibrations from the eardrum to the inner ear. |
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This painful condition renders bones so fragile that even a slight knock or fall can break them. |
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Osteoporosis is a disease marked by excessive skeletal fragility resulting in weakened bones that are susceptible to fracture. |
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Large Bothriolepis plates were scattered around through the rocks with abundant crossopterygian bones and scales in the top units. |
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Triangular processes occurred in both bones of pairs 58 times from a total of 334 paired scapulae. |
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She was badly concussed but there are no broken bones and they are just keeping her in overnight for observation. |
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The front feet are the true crubeens, which have succulent bits of meat concealed around the bones. |
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Thousands of bones and tortoise shells were discovered there which had been inscribed with ancient Chinese characters. |
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Now, under a tree by the side of the yellowed brick road, they were crunching the bones of their supper. |
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The sound that the small bones in your foot make when they break are not so much a crunch as a crack, startlingly loud. |
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Cartoons usually depict archaeologists as crusty old fogies, covered in cobwebs, and obsessed with old bones and cracked pots. |
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The bones, shells, and fruit pits found in the privy suggest a household well supplied with food and drink. |
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Postholes disturbed the burial pit, but their fill did not contain sherds or bones. |
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Like tetrapods, but unlike all other fishes, they also have frontal bones in the skull roof. |
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Head lateral views showed focal increased uptake at both frontal bones and vertical enlargement of the diploe and mandibular bones. |
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The gap between the two frontal bones did not change significantly with gestation. |
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The wholeness of the storm rasped ancient words through the fulcrums of his pivoting bones. |
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It is utterly amazing how such a little bundle of flesh and bones can exert so much control over the lives of full-grown adults. |
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Blest be the man that spares these stones, And curst be he that moves my bones. |
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A good beef stock is made with meat bones, a good fish fumet needs fish bones. |
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He is intrigued by her wry tone, uncertain of her sincerity, their funny bones still not comfortably connected. |
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He would also have become aware that not all dinosaur bones are permineralized. |
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Almost any bird needs a cuttlebone or mineral equivalent to keep their bones healthy and beaks sharp. |
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Miscarraiges, dislocated shoulders, broken bones, damaged axels there is enough reason for people to be concerned over the city's potholed roads. |
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You can't go anywhere really without stumbling over potsherds, coins, bones etc. in some parts of the country. |
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They were very much plant eaters, hunting live game for either the sport or the bones to construct their settlements. |
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The satisfaction of unearthing the remains was dampened for Mr. Boyce and his team by a dispute over ownership of the bones. |
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At least three pairs of horns are present on this animal, one on each premaxilla, prefrontal, and angular bones of the skull. |
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Scale, clean and fillet the remaining fish, putting skin, bones, heads etc. into a large pan with the fish trimmings and 2 litres of water. |
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Equally as mysterious, is the skill that is required to fillet the flesh through the network of bones. |
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This scissoring of the bones causes extra pressure to be forced upon the Carpal Tunnel. |
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These small, fluid-filled sacs lubricate and cushion pressure points between your bones and the tendons and muscles near your joints. |
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Even more horrible was a big earthen jar in the middle of the courtyard, in which hung a white death's head along with some leg bones. |
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Customers can take bones when they buy deboned meat if it is for human consumption. |
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That's all he had time to do before the cold steel of a gun impacted solidly with the fragile bones of his skull. |
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Like so many celebrated archaeological finds, the discovery of his bones was an accident, pure and simple. |
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As primary bone tumors are rare in toddlers, search for a primary tumor metastatic to bones is needed. |
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Our present system of housing and caring for elders is declinist to the very marrow of its bones. |
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Myths about giants and oversize human ancestors need not be linked to the finding of Pleistocene mammoth bones. |
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Too much growth hormone in children who are still growing will make their bones and other body parts grow excessively, resulting in gigantism. |
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The opercular series comprises each gill cover and generally consists of four bones. |
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Soy foods cause deficiencies in calcium and Vitamin D, which are essential for strong bones. |
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But in many cases finders and searchers understood they were looking at animal bones. |
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His bones were defleshed and brought back to Westminster Abbey for burial where, as far as I know, they remain. |
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Finally, after 48 hours, she was rescued and treated for dehydration, hypothermia and broken bones. |
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However people with strong bones can delay and slow the process of having porous bones. |
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We may understand something with our intellect, yet it may not have filtered down into our hearts and bones and muscles. |
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If by now you imagine yourself spending your day in dark, gloomy caves, staring at bones, you can forget about it. |
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It is the demineralization of bones that leaves them weak and susceptible to fractures. |
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It has been established that in the case of demineralization of the bones, silica loss comes before calcium loss. |
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After surgery, it may be necessary to carry out some reconstructive surgery on the soft tissue or skin, or to replace bones with prosthetics. |
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Behind the temporal regions, note the two wide and deep grooves which outline the petrous parts of the temporal bones. |
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Now she takes you on a harrowing true life journey from childhood neglect so bad she gnawed at dog bones for nourishment. |
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More than once they came across the bleached bones and disintegrated rags of gnomes, goblins, and other dead marauders. |
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The neural and costal plates of the dorsal disk form as the outgrowths of these endoskeletal bones on inside the dermis. |
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The condition causes the excretion of calcium and potassium in the urine and may harm the bones and kidneys if carb deprivation is unchecked. |
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The proportions of the distal limb bones in theropods were generally intermediate between the extremes of cheetah and elephant. |
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An abundance of jewellery made of fine seeds and shells, pandanus weavings, painted turtle shells and combfish bones also fill the gallery. |
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The pubis carries the symphysis pubis, which is a joint connecting the right and left coxal bones. |
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When large bones, such as the pelvis or femur are fractured, there will be internal bleeding from the bone and this can cause similar symptoms. |
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The left set of leg bones was cleaned by dermestid beetles and airdried in preparation for chemical analysis. |
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The bones of the ankles and feet also took on a paddle shape, and individual digits were closely packed within a streamlining envelope of soft tissue. |
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The cold in our bones couldn't thaw until the sun climbed over the peaks. |
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She was tall, but not overly so, with milky pale skin and pure sapphire eyes followed by a pert nose, full, rose lips, and highly defined cheek bones. |
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Science, and still more technology, was the future of mankind, and one of Snow's favorite phrases was about those who had the future in their bones. |
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Four animal bones were directly associated with the inhumation. |
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I hear him whisper something in his hood, and then with a rush of air, two massive, leathery wings appear from inside his robes, dark green pinions held up by black bones. |
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Ask your fishmonger to fillet it and remove the small bones. |
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In 1871, Dr. Thomas Dwight, Jr. purchased a large finback whale and had the carcass towed to Spectacle Island in Boston Harbor, where the bones were carefully cleaned. |
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He explained the first task would be to join the bones with metal plates and then start reattaching muscles and tendons, working from the inside out. |
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Like these higher mammals, the platypus and the echidna also have a jaw composed of a single bone, three inner-ear bones, relatively high metabolic rates, and hair. |
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Let him spend some time in the house interacting with the family, and allow him plenty of playtime, chew bones, and designate a spot in the house where he can relax in ease. |
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The plesiosaur and sauropod dinosaurs had 30 to 50 neck bones! |
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Alternatively, once skate is lightly poached, you can ease it from the bones, dip in egg and polenta or breadcrumbs then shallow fry to make an unusually tasty fish finger. |
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Now is the time to try for puppies, while her bones remain pliant for easy delivery and we have more free time now that Grandma no longer needs our presence. |
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The plane's owner, 67-year-old David Flashman, of Forest Drive, Keston, who was co-piloting the flight, broke bones in his back and ribs in the crash. |
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Acerbus ripped him apart, flaying his skin and then breaking his bones. |
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Thus, although wood, bones, and shells are the most common fossils, under certain conditions soft tissues, tracks and trails, and even coprolites may be preserved as fossils. |
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The distal ends of the pubic bones did not meet on the ventral midline, but the ischiadic portion of the puboischiadic plate was fused at the midline. |
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The murderous roar mocked their fragile armor of skin, flesh, bones. |
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The National Museum of Scotland is putting flesh on the bones of the tale this summer, with a major exhibition that looks at both the family's public and private life. |
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Two freezers were full of polony and other meat as well as soup bones. |
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I pause to flex my muscles and prepare for flight in case some sort of ghost or troglodyte bursts out to eat our bones or whatever part of us a ghost might eat. |
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His feet did not sweat normally and he had huge corns over his weight-bearing areas of the big toe, the heel, and the heads of the deep bones of the toes. |
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First, however, Pieribone and his colleagues are searching global coral reefs for new fluorescent proteins, ones that better shine through bones and muscle tissue. |
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Then, when they coupled, he felt his very bones melting within his body. |
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He can get aged Scottish beef foreribs for a fraction of the price he was offered in the city's West End, and he has not yet once paid for stock bones. |
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In the world where she was most alive, the sun split in the sky, the earth erupted, her body was torn to pieces, her teeth and bones crazed and broken to fragments. |
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I can feel the sense of wellness slowly creeping back into my bones. |
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Personally, I'm happy to spend my time doing the delicate work of digging out dinosaur bones, and not having to be responsible for a several-ton fossilized tree. |
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It was also severely burned and had fractured bones and skull. |
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She has never required any surgical procedures or fractured any bones. |
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By examining the cross sections of bones microscopically, paleontologists can determine how much the bones grew each year, as well as the age of an animal at death. |
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What's left is recognisable as human bones, though they're very friable. |
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It is thought possible that the bones could have been buried beneath an old crypt under the original chapel or that they could have been moved from a nearby burial site. |
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They differ from other artiodactyl horns in that they do not project from the frontal bones, but lie over the sutures between the frontal and parietal bones. |
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Executives from some of the country's blue-chip companies dress up in silly wigs and clothes in an attempt to locate their funny bones and get rid of their pent-up feelings. |
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The material collected was resistant to gastric juice, including fish bones, rays, jaws, and teeth of a number of animals, plus crab and insect exoskeletons. |
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It is common knowledge that the tongue partly rests between the bones that form the jaw, and to be more precise, between the dental rows and on the floor of the mouth. |
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The figure of one million years and greater is derived from the fossilised fauna found side by side with the burnt antelope bones in the same layer of decalcified sand. |
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He screamed a primal scream that rattled bones, chilled blood and reached what mysterious organs served for the ears of those who live on the edges of the universe. |
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They draw out guts, pull livers, cut wings and gizzards, pop thigh bones. |
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Following a healthy lifestyle throughout life is the best way to delay the onset of osteoporosis, and slow the rate at which your bones become brittle. |
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In gnathic bones, the pattern is characterized by the presence of significant amounts of sclerotic bone, however, bone trabeculae are discontinuous. |
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Jude was as thin as a stick and his bones protruded through sallow skin. |
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I also need to squeeze in a nice, long soak in the bath because my muscles and bones are feeling tired, not to mention that I need to trim my pubes. |
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Girls experience epiphyseal closure of long bones secondary to estrogen secretion, grow approximately two to eight inches in height, and gain 15 to 65 lb during pubescence. |
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I have to be close to the dirt and goo and stuff of things, right up close, so I can see it, can feel it in my bones, can taste it clear down in my belly. |
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It turns out that Fiona, somewhat man hungry, has designs on Henry, Yvonne turns up, and the proceedings come to an unraveled conclusion with no bones broken. |
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I found rabbit bones as delicate and thin as the finest eggshell porcelain, and crunched across the beaches to pick up pebbles of orange, green and black. |
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The children have had their own section of the dig and have uncovered a cobbled courtyard that stretches over 100 sq metres as well as animal bones and pottery. |
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In a normal joint, the ligaments are like tight elastic bands holding the bones apart, while the bones themselves have a protective coating of cartilage. |
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The teeth of the two large crocodile species known to live then were too blunt and too irregularly spaced to have produced the narrow grooves found on the Majungatholus bones. |
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Conversely, with opposing sets of muscles acting on the jaw at various points, it would be disadvantageous to divide the structure of the mandible among several bones. |
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Although disarticulated, the bones maintain some anatomical organization. |
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Vertebral discs cushion the spine, like spongy coasters between each vertebra that protect bones from banging against each other while one is running or jumping. |
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One of the H. erectus bones, part of a femur, even reveals telltale surface etchings from stomach acid, indicating it was swallowed and then disgorged. |
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The isotopic composition of these recrystallized bones is therefore a mixture between two endmember compositions, one biogenic and one diagenetic. |
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For European and American Stone Age peoples, end-scrapers served as heavy-duty scraping tools that could have been used on animal hides, wood, or bones. |
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Some anthropologists believe that the very earliest cave dwellers used everything from thorns, sticks, bones and stone to fashion crude hair pins. |
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Excavations found a rough stone chamber-like feature towards the east end with a female burial, bones from various other individuals, and a necklace of dog whelk shells. |
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Guitars are used sparingly, but they ring with precision and elegance, dropping tones as if laying bones to rest beneath a crowd of exultant mourners. |
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He had only been taught the bare bones of the system, but carried on regardless. |
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The eyeballs were surrounded by a ring of bones, the sclerotic ossicle, which probably protected their eyes when diving abruptly for prey. |
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The long, stalled cairn, built of local stone, was once a communal burial place for the bones of an ancient community. |
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In 1834, physician Johann Friedrich Engelhardt discovered some vertebrae and leg bones at Heroldsberg near Nuremberg, Germany. |
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The shrine was destroyed during the English Reformation, but the bones were reburied in the chapel. |
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All sites yielded almost complete and partial skeletons of Plateosaurus, as well as isolated bones. |
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In 1831 the bones were dug up and then reburied in a new tomb, which is still there. |
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Newspaper artists gave their impressions of how she'd look today, fleshing out her bones with a beachgirl's curves. |
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The head of a ring of bodysnatchers who stole the bones of broadcaster Alistair Cooke pleaded guilty yesterday. |
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The site also had included approximately 200 stone tools and 300 animal bones. |
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This also explains bones remains in the Arctic Coast and islands of the New Siberian Group. |
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Since most of what remains of dinosaurs is bones and footprints, a paleoillustrator must have a head for paleontology and anatomy as well. |
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Most commonly preserved are the harder parts of organisms such as bones, shells, and the woody tissue of plants. |
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Their limb bones, for example, weigh 30 percent less per unit area of bone than expected for similarly sized dogs. |
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The builders placed the bones of deer and oxen in the bottom of the ditch, as well as some worked flint tools. |
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Scientists believe that dropping temperatures trigger their bodies to breakdown bones and tissues and absorb them. |
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As temperatures start to rise with the onset of spring, their bodies start to rebuild the lost bones and tissues. |
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The wing bones of bats have a slightly lower breaking stress point than those of birds. |
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The patagium is stretched between the arm and hand bones, down the lateral side of the body and down to the hind limbs. |
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Occasionally, badger bones may be discovered in strata from much earlier dates, due to the burrowing habits of the animal. |
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The bird regurgitates pellets of indigestible material such as fur, bones and the chitinous remains of insects. |
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A few times each day, a small greyish pellet of fish bones and other indigestible remains is regurgitated. |
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Some primitive snakes are known to have possessed hindlimbs, but their pelvic bones lacked a direct connection to the vertebrae. |
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The bones of the mandible and quadrate bones can also pick up ground borne vibrations. |
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Their age can be determined by counting the number of annual growth rings in the bones of their phalanges. |
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Minute teeth also present on the pharyngeal bones, forming a patch on the upper pharyngeals. |
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Aside from cranial features, these features include the form of bones in the wrist, forearm, shoulder, knees, and feet. |
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He compared bones and muscles of human and chimpanzee thumbs, finding that humans have 3 muscles which are lacking in chimpanzees. |
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It was only a pile of skin and bones after all. An animal, or rather a bovial collapse. |
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Octopus middens are commonly made of rocks, shells, and the bones of prey, although they may contain anything the octopus finds that it can move. |
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The little bones of the ear drum do in straining and relaxing it as the braces of the war drum do in that. |
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In 2013 a team of archaeologists, led by Mike Parker Pearson, excavated more than 50,000 cremated bones of 63 individuals buried at Stonehenge. |
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The excavated remains of culled animal bones suggest that people may have gathered at the site for the winter rather than the summer. |
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He excavated some 24 barrows before digging in and around the stones and discovered charred wood, animal bones, pottery and urns. |
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Initial observations suggested that the bones did not appear to belong to somebody with the physique or age at death associated with Columbus. |
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These fish have muscular bodies, ossified bones, scales, well developed gills and central nervous systems, and large hearts and kidneys. |
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In all present femora, sediment and other bones obscure the caudodistal part. |
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Do not swallow every story that is told. There may be a grain of truth somewhere in all the myths, but chew the meat and spit out the bones. |
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These scutes overlap the seams between the shell bones and add strength to the shell. |
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These lighter shells have large spaces called fontanelles between the shell bones. |
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The broken bones were able to heal, thanks to the immobilization of her leg in a cast. |
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There are no living floors, nor did they process bones to obtain the marrow. |
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We are of Him and in Him, even as though our very flesh and bones should be made continuate with his. |
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Perching bird osteology, especially of the limb bones, is rather diagnostic. |
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Birds were perhaps important as a food source, and bones of as many as 80 species have been found in excavations of early Stone Age settlements. |
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Bird skins are prepared by retaining the key bones of the wings, leg and skull along with the skin and feathers. |
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The coins were eight feet below ground together with some cow bones, and are now in the Penlee House Museum. |
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Scholarly descriptions of what would now be recognized as dinosaur bones first appeared in the late 17th century in England. |
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Gideon Mantell recognized similarities between his fossils and the bones of modern iguanas. |
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The 1999 archeological excavation uncovered the foundations of the abbey buildings and some bones. |
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Examples include bones, shells, exoskeletons, stone imprints of animals or microbes, hair, petrified wood, oil, coal, and DNA remnants. |
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The only source of information for these men has been through osteological analysis of the human bones found at the wrecksite. |
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Nine barrels have been found to contain bones of cattle, indicating that they contained pieces of beef butchered and stored as ship's rations. |
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In addition, the bones of pigs and fish, stored in baskets, have also been found. |
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In March 2013, the Diocese of Winchester exhumed the bones from the unmarked grave at St Bartholomew's and placed them in secure storage. |
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The walls of the braincase are bony but lack supratemporal and postfrontal bones. |
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After the restoration of the monarchy, the bones were collected and replaced randomly in their chests. |
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A more dubious story tells of how he wished for his bones to be carried along on future expeditions against the Scots. |
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Chimpanzees have ridges on their finger bones that stem from the way that they clutch their mothers' fur as infants. |
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In 1997, geneticists were able to extract a short sequence of DNA from Neanderthal bones. |
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This section describes bones with Neanderthal traits in chronological order. |
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Other types of tissue found in bones include bone marrow, endosteum, periosteum, nerves, blood vessels and cartilage. |
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The hard outer layer of bones is composed of cortical bone also called compact bone. |
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In adults, red marrow is mostly found in the bone marrow of the femur, the ribs, the vertebrae and pelvic bones. |
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Nevertheless, bones are mostly what endures after the early phases of corpsehood. |
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The bones in their fins eventually evolved into legs and they became the first tetrapods, 390 million years ago, and began to develop lungs. |
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It has been asserted that some of the Cromagnards may not have eaten much muscle meat, because there are no bones of food animals in their caves. |
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Fontanelles normally close by about two years of age, while the sutures between the bones may persist into early adolescence. |
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