Protein in the urine, proteinuria, is generally confirmed using a precipitation test. |
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Dryland corn is rooting at the three foot depth and, even with high temperatures and lack of precipitation, it is looking good. |
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The circulation is then entirely of cold polar air, and there is little precipitation associated with such lows when they reach the polar areas. |
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In addition to detecting enemy aircraft, the radar beam also echoed from precipitation, which proved a valuable tool in war planning. |
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Acid rain refers to any precipitation, rain or snow, that's more acid than ordinary rain or snow. |
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As air rises, it cools, and its humidity begins condensing into clouds and precipitation. |
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Weak cold fronts usually bring nothing more than a band of low cloud and any precipitation from these fronts will be very weak indeed. |
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Subsequent synthesis reactions using different primary, secondary, and aromatic amines had similar reaction and precipitation times. |
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Eventually, basin shallowing allowed in situ precipitation of selenite in shallow lagoons and ponds near the basin depocentre. |
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These thunderstorms often produce heavy precipitation, which can cause soil erosion. |
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The most widely used method for separation of nucleic acids is precipitation with ethanol or other organic solvents. |
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Treatment in this way causes precipitation of the alpha phase from the beta. |
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These low 880 values represent precipitation from meteoric waters depleted in 180, or elevated temperatures during formation in burial settings. |
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After methylation, DNA was extracted with phenol-chloroform followed by ethanol precipitation. |
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Cold, wind and precipitation can make you mighty uncomfortable, not to mention put you at risk for hypothermia. |
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What about psychokinesis, clairvoyance, transmutation, precipitation of matter? |
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Rising motion and the associated low pressure favor precipitation and storm formation. |
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The increase in precipitation resulted from an upper air trough situated over the Great Basin region of the Rocky Mountains. |
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Precipitation of gold is favoured by similar conditions to those that favour precipitation of silica. |
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Long-lead outlooks indicated a cooler August for the entire state, with above normal precipitation over the southwest and southern panhandle. |
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Cell debris was removed by centrifugation, and the supernatant was fractionated by ammonium sulfate precipitation. |
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So much rain has fallen that precipitation deficits from last year's drought have been eliminated. |
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In each of these settings, progressive evaporation of seawater leads to precipitation of calcite and gypsum followed by halite. |
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The precipitation was on that borderline between sleet and just frigid rain. |
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Halite precipitation takes the form of subaqueous cumulates, or subaqueous bottom or intrasediment precipitates. |
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A year with extremely low precipitation may allow them to compete much better than species such as Pennsylvania smartweed. |
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These chemicals undergo reactions in the atmosphere to form sulfuric acid and nitric acid, falling to the earth as acid precipitation. |
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When the vapor condenses into rain or freezes to make snow, the precipitation is acid, which can fall into lakes. |
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However, this negative correlation may be due to an association between precipitation and damaging snowfalls or ice storms. |
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In fact, there's a 100 times as much snowfall and precipitation in south Greenland as there is in the north. |
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This trend reflects the likelihood of increased snowmelt and precipitation during the maximum melt season from May to July. |
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How strong is the evidence that cannabis is causally implicated in the precipitation or exacerbation of schizophrenia and other psychoses? |
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In addition, manganese can enhance the precipitation strengthening of vanadium steels and to a lesser extent, niobium steels. |
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Well, it is quite light in colour to be a nimbostratus but precipitation all day long in connection with a weather front depicts the cloud. |
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Weather called for low ceilings and light precipitation throughout the morning, so we discussed a backup plan. |
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The sparry calcite is interpreted as a single phase of precipitation that infilled external moulds of the arthropod. |
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When water becomes supersaturated in dissolved calcium carbonate, solid calcium carbonate can grow by precipitation from the water. |
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As the slope steepens, warm, moist air overrunning the cold air is cut off and the precipitation coverage begins to rapidly decrease. |
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The clouds were omnipresent, threatening to pour down some terrible precipitation at the slightest provocation. |
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Will the change in barometric pressure or the oncoming of precipitation give an allergy sensitive person a headache? |
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Minimal fractionation accompanies the precipitation of pyrite from dissolved sulphide. |
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Lack of precipitation resulted in a severe decrease in availability of mixed grass forage, resulting in animal BW loss. |
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One factor that may control early calcite precipitation in sand injections is pressure drops that occurred shortly after fluidization ceased. |
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The cold, but dry weekend I expected would now feature some precipitation, possibly snow or freezing rain, on Sunday. |
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Specifically, annual precipitation directly correlates with soil moisture, which affects plant growth and, consequently, the food of woodrats. |
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Matched precipitation heads are recommended to ensure that wastewater is evenly applied to avoid ponding and surface runoff. |
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In places where the warmer air extends to the ground, the precipitation will fall as rain. |
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These clouds can also produce Virga, which is when precipitation falls but evaporates before it reaches the ground. |
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The past few weeks have been stormy ones, but at resort level, precipitation is still falling as rain. |
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They were formed mainly in the relatively shallow waters of continental shelves by chemical or biochemical precipitation. |
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If the rising air is humid enough, water vapor in it will condense into clouds and maybe precipitation. |
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Because cattle cannot climb to higher elevations, producers tend to graze their cattle in semiflat and flat lands, where precipitation is lower. |
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Long periods of precipitation, sprinkler irrigation to protect plants from freezing, or heavy dews in the spring also favor the disease. |
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And then it struck me that English does in fact distinguish precipitation from the stuff after it hits the ground. |
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Acidic proteins are known to trigger carbonate precipitation via matrix mediated processes in microbialites. |
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When water vapour condenses, it generates precipitation and heats the air in ways that influence downwind ecosystems, as described later. |
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The resulting upward motion at fronts causes cooling of the air, condensation of water vapour to produce clouds, and eventually precipitation. |
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Graupel is a wonderful form of precipitation. It is not snow, not hail, not sleet, and definitely not rain. |
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A climograph combines a line graph of mean monthly temperature with a bar graph of total monthly precipitation. |
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The answer is probably related to the size of melt reservoirs and the kinetics of zircon solution and precipitation. |
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Anything that retains water is an absolute gift in places like Tony's ranch, which gets only 13 inches of precipitation a year. |
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Many ecological and geomorphic processes in high mountains are influenced by changes in precipitation and temperature. |
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The region has cool temperatures and frequent precipitation, fog, heavy cloud cover, and strong winds. |
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Recent precipitation patterns bode well for spring growth of alfalfa and native grasses. |
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The most common type of substitution reactions of compounds of metals is ion exchange accompanied by precipitation. |
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Due to the low amount of protein in grape flesh it was necessary to concentrate protein in extracts by acetone precipitation. |
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Acid precipitation has become a widespread and increasing problem in several countries in Europe and North America. |
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The lake has no major inflow channel and water supply is maintained through spring water inflow and precipitation. |
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To evaluate the mouthwashes for compatibility with the DNA purification chemistry, the protein precipitation step was examined. |
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It provides an estimate of how much precipitation or temperature change must be invoked to explain the current net ablation of the glacier. |
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One of the primary methods of qualitative analysis involves precipitation reactions. |
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A high precipitation super-cell produces very heavy rains, large hail, downbursts and tornadoes. |
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The clouds are deepest in the area just ahead of the surface front, and this is where precipitation falls as small raindrops. |
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The lake acts somewhat like a huge rain gauge, so that lake level is a proxy for precipitation. |
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Most of the precipitation fails as heavy, almost daily rainstorms between July and September. |
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Energy advected to and from the lake by precipitation, surface water, and ground water had little effect on evaporation rates. |
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Annual precipitation ranges from 8-14 inches, and in the recent drought that has become 5-10 inches. |
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Problems can arise even if the rate of groundwater withdrawals doesn't exceed the rate at which precipitation recharges the aquifer, says Alley. |
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After development, precipitation no longer percolates through the soil to recharge the groundwater. |
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During our walk there was a wintry mix of precipitation falling, and some very slippery spots on the sidewalk where there was not much traction. |
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In a hypereutectic gray iron, solidification begins with the precipitation of kish graphite in the melt. |
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Mercury deposition to forest sites occurs mainly by means of litterfall, throughfall, and precipitation. |
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The galactomannan was obtained from the alkali-soluble fraction by selective precipitation. |
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Recharge is the amount of water from precipitation that replenishes groundwater in storage. |
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Delaying sampling until spring provides for soil moisture replenishment from fall, winter, and early spring precipitation. |
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Drought during those two years mainly resulted from a lack of growing season precipitation. |
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In heat treatable alloys, annealing also may be accompanied by precipitation and changes in solute concentration. |
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The widths and densities of annual rings in trees are partly controlled by climate, specifically temperature, precipitation, and snow cover. |
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There are two basic processes that enable cloud particles to mature into fully fledged precipitation. |
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Meteoric water, derived from the atmosphere, originates and falls to the Earth as precipitation. |
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Rain is the precipitation of condensed water vapor caused when a warm front meets a cold front in the upper atmosphere. |
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Groundwater heads would be relatively low because of the low available recharge, from low precipitation and partially frozen ground. |
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Acid rain and acid precipitation are common terms used to describe wet deposition, while acid deposition encompasses both dry and wet acidic substances. |
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Most recharge to the Edwards aquifer results from the percolation of streamflow loss and the infiltration of precipitation through porous parts of the recharge zone. |
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A potent threat to the environment of industrialized countries and their neighbors, acid rain occurs when precipitation picks up industrial chemicals as it falls to earth. |
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In the terminology of sedimentary rocks, a chemical rock is composed chiefly of material deposited by chemical precipitation, either organic or inorganic. |
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Maximum precipitation values in Antarctica are found a short way inland at an altitude of about 1600 m, where orographic precipitation is greatest. |
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Likely all of these factors played some role in initiating beryl precipitation, particularly where mineralization is contained within highly altered vein selvages. |
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Selective precipitation was the basis behind the qualitative analysis scheme that was used years ago to identify which ions were present in unknown aqueous solutions. |
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The end of August could lead to earlier nights and the odd spell of seasonal weather mixed in with unusual conditions, with precipitation likely where rain falls. |
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A large number of small part ides are able to form during the quench from the solution-treating temperature and on the subsequent low-temperature precipitation heat treatment. |
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A climograph is a graphical representation of basic climatic parameters, that is monthly average temperature and precipitation, at a certain location. |
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Maps that show areas of potential floods use precipitation radar data and high-resolution measurements of water content of clouds made by microwave radiometers. |
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When the precipitation rate increases in Brazil, Paraguay and Argentina, floods inundate southern China and Bangladesh and drought hits some of the remotest Indian villages. |
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Also selected are instrument technologies for microwave radiometry and advanced radars to measure global precipitation, soil moisture and sea surface salinity. |
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But the states' streamflows and ground-water levels still haven't completely recovered from the small amounts of precipitation that fell this past fall and winter. |
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Iron is transferred via ground water from topographically higher areas and precipitation occurs at valley base, where the land surface intersects the water table. |
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It has been found that the density of perennial streams relates directly to the available moisture, which is defined as precipitation minus evapotranspiration. |
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Simpson took charge of Kew observatory where he continued his research on the electrical structure of thunderstorms and electrification of precipitation. |
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The temperature and precipitation clusters defined in this study provide a useful baseline for future examination of climate change in the circumpolar Arctic. |
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The early diagenetic precipitation of hematite and calcite took place during subaerial exposure and are the results of caliche and palaeosol formation. |
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These developments led to the eventual rise of the Neptunist school, which advocated precipitation from a primeval ocean to produce the ancient crystalline rocks. |
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The formation of botryoidal aragonite and clotted micrite was followed by silicification of carbonate phases and precipitation of authigenic quartz. |
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No-till soils remain wetter longer in the spring and less precipitation is required to saturate them compared with plowed soil during the early stages of crop development. |
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If the rising air has enough humidity, clouds and precipitation form. |
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A budget of water mass is maintained in each box and fluxes of condensate and precipitation particles through the top, bottom and sides are computed. |
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Also in the northeast, could see a wintry mix of precipitation. |
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Within the Mackenzie Basin, a northward decrease in runoff reflects the spatial trend in precipitation, which shows a decline towards the northern plains and the Shield areas. |
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From one third to two-thirds of the precipitation falls as snow. |
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Waves so high that they disappeared into clouds, gales that betimes lifted the boat from the very sea, rain and hail, all manner of precipitation. |
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Although the pollutants may be deposited in dry form or in rain, snow, or fog, the deposition phenomenon is often called acid rain or acid precipitation. |
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It is postulated that the lowered pH microenvironment in the guts of organisms may accelerate mineral dissolution and precipitation processes during ingestion. |
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Current research has shown an increase in soil acidification through anthropogenic effects including acid precipitation and nitrification of ammoniacal fertilizers. |
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Eventually saturation occurs and precipitation falls and downdrafts occur. |
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The term hydrometeors is used primarily in this document, but the use of the term precipitation used here is tantamount to falling hydrometeors at any altitude. |
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Nitrogen additions to high-strength steels containing vanadium have become commercially important because the additions enhance precipitation hardening. |
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A storm system late last week brought welcome precipitation and limited relief to north central and northeast Nebraska, often with 2-4 inches of rain. |
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Their specificity could be related to particular defined groups on the antigen and evaluated quantitatively with precipitin reactions and hapten inhibition of precipitation. |
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Extreme weather events such as heat waves, heavy precipitation events, floods, draughts, fires, pest outbreaks and severe cyclonic storms are projected to increase. |
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Organomineralization has also been used to denote early diagenetic precipitation triggered by residual organic compounds such as fulvic acids, an area not treated here. |
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The obtained extracts were fractionated by acetone precipitation. |
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But in Ahvaz, the precipitation was described as acid rain, which brought more pollutants down upon the city. |
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The heat going into or out of a marine basin or a certain area in the sea through ocean currents or precipitation is called advective heat. |
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It is shown by several studies that precipitation depends on certain allotropic forms of calcium carbonate. |
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Thus, it is logical to use these dyes as specific bifunctional ligands for affinity precipitation. |
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The lignin is isolated through acid precipitation of black liquor which produces unsulphonated lignin. |
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Based on field and greenhouse experiments scutella were observed to disperse following precipitation events. |
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We removed albumin and other non-IgG proteins by precipitation with caprylic acid. |
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The amount of arsenic was determined using titrimetric determination of arsenate after precipitation as silver arsenate. |
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In rhabdomyolysis, precipitation of myoglobin is enhanced in an acidic environment causing renal dysfunction. |
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All transfections were done using the calcium phosphate precipitation method of Berkner and Sharp. |
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All transfections were done by calcium phosphate precipitation based on the method of Berkner and Sharp. |
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Casein of skimmed milk was removed by acid precipitation and the heat coagulable protein by percholoric acid. |
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This is due to fluoride precipitation during the long centrifugation step resulting in lower fluoride concentrations in the supernate. |
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In order for precipitation to occur, a nucleating particle must be present to allow for aggregation of water molecules. |
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Owing to the reducing nature of thiols, changes in the metal oxidation number were also possible before precipitation. |
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Apparently, it also has incredible cosmetic properties and is a product of all the precipitation through the oysterbeds. |
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In this case, these compounds would undergo polymerisation and precipitation during the dry period and depolymerisation during wet seasons. |
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They found the temperature and precipitation levels by measuring the width of annual growth rings in the wood. |
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Rodents will be active this spring because new spring plants nourished by winter precipitation will provide plentiful harborage. |
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The warmer air is forced to rise and if conditions are right becomes saturated, causing precipitation. |
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Evaporation, precipitation, river inflow and sea ice melting influence surface salinity values. |
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In some areas precipitation has contributed to poor soils, resulting in part in moorland landscapes that characterize much of the range. |
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Cumbria usually experiences the most severe weather, with high precipitation in the mountainous regions of the Lake District and Pennines. |
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Additional fresh water comes from the difference of precipitation less evaporation, which is positive. |
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The mainland experiences four distinct seasons, with colder winters and less precipitation inland. |
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The oceanic climate typically experiences cool winters with warmer summers and precipitation all year round, with more experienced in winter. |
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The oceanic climate is typified by cool winters with warmer summers and precipitation all year round, with more experienced in winter. |
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It typically lacks a dry season, as precipitation is more evenly dispersed throughout the year. |
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In most areas with an oceanic climate, precipitation comes in the form of rain for the majority of the year. |
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The almost monomineralic product results from buffering of sulfide concentrations at low values by sphalerite precipitation. |
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In areas underlain by soluble bedrock, its solution by precipitation and percolating water commonly produce cavities. |
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In East Africa, different animals are taken to specific regions throughout the year that correspond to the seasonal patterns of precipitation. |
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In general, at higher altitudes, the temperatures decrease and precipitation increases. |
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Annual precipitation is usually sufficient, but it occurs almost exclusively during the winter months, making summer droughts a constant threat. |
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Another factor is the increased aridity occurring with glacial maxima, which reduces the precipitation available to maintain glaciation. |
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Beside the expected cooling down in comparison with the current climate, a significant precipitation change happened here. |
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The climate is projected to warm and precipitation patterns to change under present climate change models. |
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The amount of native tundra biomass depends more on the local temperature than the amount of precipitation. |
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Common heat treatment processes include annealing, precipitation strengthening, quenching, and tempering. |
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The precipitation of copper in ancient silver can be used to date artifacts, as copper is nearly always a constituent of silver alloys. |
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It is interesting that how temperature and precipitation related factors differs in the limitation of species distributions. |
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As the altitude increases, the main form of precipitation becomes snow and the winds increase. |
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The source of almost all fresh water is precipitation from the atmosphere, in the form of mist, rain and snow. |
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Ice pellets are a form of precipitation consisting of small, translucent balls of ice. |
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These dunes often occur in semiarid areas where the precipitation is retained in the lower parts of the dune and underlying soils. |
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The abundance of rocks formed by seawater precipitation is in the same order as the precipitation given above. |
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The country relies heavily on rain to provide household water, but in the past 30 years average yearly precipitation has decreased. |
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Total precipitation is highly variable, generally increasing with elevation. |
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The precipitation levels and the level of maritime moderation varies depending on location and elevation. |
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Slightly more precipitation falls during July and August than during the other months. |
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Transferring warm or cold air and precipitation to coastal regions, winds may carry them inland. |
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If precipitation exceeds evaporation, as is the case in polar and temperate regions, salinity will be lower. |
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If evaporation exceeds precipitation, as is the case in tropical regions, salinity will be higher. |
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This result occurs when chemical use is excessive or poorly timed with respect to high precipitation. |
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Rain gauge data is used to measure total precipitation over a drainage basin, and there are different ways to interpret that data. |
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If the gauges are many and evenly distributed over an area of uniform precipitation, using the arithmetic mean method will give good results. |
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The isohyetal method involves contours of equal precipitation are drawn over the gauges on a map. |
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The high precipitation is often used in the marketing of the city, and features to a degree on postcards sold in the city. |
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Past precipitation can be estimated in the modern era with the global network of precipitation gauges. |
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Climatological temperatures substantially affect cloud cover and precipitation. |
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During interglacial stages, when less precipitation fell, the pluvial lakes shrank to form small salt flats. |
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All beaches grow and shrink depending on tides, precipitation, wind, waves and current. |
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This is used with weather radar to measure radial wind velocity and precipitation rate in each different volume of air. |
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Minerals in a sedimentary rock can have formed by precipitation during sedimentation or by diagenesis. |
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This can result in the precipitation of a certain chemical species producing colouring and staining of the rock, or the formation of concretions. |
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The studies found that precipitation and mean diurnal temperature range were the most influential variables. |
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When atmospheric conditions permit an uplift of warm, humid air, this water condenses and falls to the surface as precipitation. |
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Atmospheric circulation, topographic features, and temperature differences determine the average precipitation that falls in each region. |
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This occurs when a region receives consistently below average precipitation. |
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Despite the lack of precipitation over the central portion of the continent, ice there lasts for extended periods. |
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Increased evaporation and atmospheric moisture resulted in increased precipitation. |
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Evidence of increased precipitation is the development of snow and ice that covers Greenland, which led to an accumulation of the icecap. |
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Seawater is oversaturated in carbonate, so under certain conditions CaCO3 precipitation is possible. |
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Carbonate precipitation is thermodynamically favoured at high temperature and low pressure. |
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The three types of precipitation described above determine different platform geometries. |
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In these platforms precipitation is biotically controlled, mostly by autotrophic organisms. |
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These platforms are characterised by abiotic precipitation and biotically induced precipitation. |
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Six climate classifications use the term to help define the various temperature and precipitation regimes for the planet Earth. |
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At times, the average annual precipitation may be more evenly distributed throughout the year, or a spring maximum is present. |
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Their findings suggested that precipitation increases in the high northern latitudes, and polar ice melts as a consequence. |
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In meteorology, precipitation is any product of the condensation of atmospheric water vapor that falls under gravity. |
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The main forms of precipitation include drizzle, rain, sleet, snow, graupel and hail. |
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Thus, fog and mist are not precipitation but suspensions, because the water vapor does not condense sufficiently to precipitate. |
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Thundersnow is possible within a cyclone's comma head and within lake effect precipitation bands. |
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In mountainous areas, heavy precipitation is possible where upslope flow is maximized within windward sides of the terrain at elevation. |
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Mechanisms of producing precipitation include convective, stratiform, and orographic rainfall. |
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Mixtures of different types of precipitation, including types in different categories, can fall simultaneously. |
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Frozen forms of precipitation include snow, ice needles, ice pellets, hail, and graupel. |
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Ice pellets or sleet are a form of precipitation consisting of small, translucent balls of ice. |
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When it gets cold, Mars has precipitation that most likely takes the form of ice needles, rather than rain or snow. |
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Convective precipitation falls over a certain area for a relatively short time, as convective clouds have limited horizontal extent. |
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When moist air tries to dislodge an arctic air mass, overrunning snow can result within the poleward side of the elongated precipitation band. |
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The stronger the temperature decrease with height, the deeper the clouds get, and the greater the precipitation rate becomes. |
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As a result, the modern global record of precipitation largely depends on satellite observations. |
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Satellite sensors now in practical use for precipitation fall into two categories. |
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Various mathematical schemes, or algorithms, use these and other properties to estimate precipitation from the IR data. |
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However, most precipitation data sets in current use do not employ these data sources. |
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Subarctic climates are cold with continuous permafrost and little precipitation. |
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Increasing temperatures tend to increase evaporation which leads to more precipitation. |
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A QPF will be specified when a measurable precipitation type reaching a minimum threshold is forecast for any hour during a QPF valid period. |
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Terrain is considered in QPFs by use of topography or based upon climatological precipitation patterns from observations with fine detail. |
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During a single storm, the precipitation can range from a torrential downpour to a fine mist. |
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The effects of climate change on human systems, mostly due to warming or shifts in precipitation patterns, or both, have been detected worldwide. |
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During the El Nino, the warm pool migrates eastward along with the concomitant precipitation and current anomalies. |
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The second letter indicates the seasonal precipitation type, while the third letter indicates the level of heat. |
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These climates are characterized by actual precipitation less than a threshold value set equal to the potential evapotranspiration. |
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The amount and intensity of precipitation is the main climatic factor governing soil erosion by water. |
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Climates can be classified according to the average and the typical ranges of different variables, most commonly temperature and precipitation. |
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These quantities are most often surface variables such as temperature, precipitation, and wind. |
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A desert is a landscape form or region that receives very little precipitation. |
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Many deserts are formed by rain shadows, as mountains block the path of moisture and precipitation to the desert. |
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It monitors the portion of total precipitation used to nourish vegetation over a certain area. |
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Rainfall in this giant desert has to overcome the physical and atmospheric barriers that normally prevent the production of precipitation. |
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Evidence also indicates an increase in precipitation in New Mexico because of the same Gulf conditions that were influencing Texas. |
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The Pacific Northwest region of experienced 2o to 3oC of cooling and an increase in precipitation. |
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The Southwest appears to have seen an increase in precipitation as well, also with an average 2o of cooling. |
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However, the mean number of days with precipitation per year is one of the lowest in Europe. |
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In the valleys, fertile soils and high precipitation allow for the growth of thick and lush forests. |
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This is due to the diversity of climate and the precipitation patterns in the country. |
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As summer winds are forced over the Escarpment, moisture is extracted as precipitation. |
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The reason behind this high productivity and endemism may be the relatively stable nature of precipitation. |
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The heaviest precipitation occurs during the autumn months, although more frequent rainy spells occur in winter. |
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In general precipitation is scarce in Muscat, with several months on average seeing only a trace of rainfall. |
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However, in recent years, heavy precipitation events from tropical systems originating in the Arabian Sea have affected the city. |
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The young man thanked me, and took his leave with some little precipitation, after declining a glass of liquor. |
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The terrain is entirely treeless, although quite lush owing to frequent precipitation. |
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Unlike many parts of Mexico, Tabasco has abundant year round precipitation. |
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As previously mentioned, winter precipitation occurs in the form of persistent morning drizzle events. |
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Average monthly precipitation is lowest in May, and highest in September and October. |
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This is because of low precipitation and the relatively warm climate resulting in less snow and more evaporation. |
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Climates in the state are grouped by precipitation and average temperatures into three major groups. |
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They are then differentiated according to the insolation, temperature and precipitation of snow and rain. |
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Yearly precipitation generally increases from north to south, with the regions closer to the Gulf being the most humid. |
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This also allows the use of precipitation hardening and improves the alloy's temperature resistance. |
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The precipitation is assisted with mosses and other vegetable structures, thus leaving cavities in the calcareous sinter after they have decayed. |
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The areas that are not arid and receive high precipitation experience periodic flooding from rapid snowmelt and runoff. |
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It has moderately warm summers and mild winters, with precipitation at all times of year. |
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Convective precipitation is generally more intense, and of shorter duration, than stratiform precipitation. |
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Orographic precipitation occurs when moist air is forced upwards over rising terrain, such as a mountain. |
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Frozen forms of precipitation include snow, ice needles, sleet, hail, and graupel. |
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In turn, precipitation can enhance the temperature and moisture contrast along a frontal boundary. |
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The lift of the air up the side of the mountain results in adiabatic cooling, and ultimately condensation and precipitation. |
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When classified according to the rate of precipitation, rain can be divided into categories. |
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It is known as the wettest place of England with an annual precipitation of over 5 metres. |
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The moisture they need for growing can be supplied by either a high groundwater table, or by high humidity or high precipitation. |
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The air descends on the leeward side, but due to the precipitation it has lost much of its moisture. |
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There is regular but generally light precipitation throughout the year, contributing to a relatively high humidity level. |
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In most of Great Britain there is a temperate climate which receives high levels of precipitation and medium levels of sunlight. |
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Some fronts produce no precipitation and little cloudiness, although there is invariably a wind shift. |
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Only by extreme siccity is such land possible when more water rises in evaporation than falls by precipitation. |
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This foehn effect causes a very high variability in precipitation patterns in mountain areas. |
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Autism is more common in areas of impaired UVB penetration such as poleward latitudes, urban areas, areas with high air pollution, and areas of high precipitation. |
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In recent years, precipitation and winds have increased in the city. |
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Then, with Teesside imploring the Gods of football and wintery precipitation to deepen the peasouper and get the game off, it suddenly, inexplicably lifted. |
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It is also possible that phosphate minerals did not form because not enough iron was available for precipitation of variscite, strengite, or vivianite. |
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He also said the presence cumulous clouds is a common sight in the western and eastern provinces in the country during this season but they will not cause precipitation. |
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The seventh edition employs a two-column format for examples, adds colorful flowcharts, and combines the chapters on complex ion and precipitation equilibrium. |
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Direct measurement of precipitation by pluviometer, totalizer and pluviograph is done by ministry of energy and meteorological organization of country. |
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They grew tepary beans on fields made of flash flood debris, irrigated by winter rains and summer monsoon runoff and not much else, ten inches or so of precipitation annually. |
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We worked only in the arboretum, ornamental plants, xerophyllous scrubland and greenhouse tropical vegetation sections during the period of greatest precipitation. |
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Thanks to above average precipitation that started falling in October 2004, many of Utah's boatable reservoirs and rivers will be on the rebound this summer. |
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They spend the whole winter complaining about Pac-A-Macs, precipitation, bronchitis, mucus, the cost of linctus, chilblains, heating bills and death from hypothermia. |
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After expression, we purified MutM using polyethleneimine precipitation, ammonium sulfate precipitation, cation exchange chromatography, and size exclusion chromatography. |
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Enrichment of E2F1 in acetylated H3K9 promoters of TP53, BAX, PUMA, C-MYC, and C-FOS fragment precipitation was detected with antiacetylated H3K9 and anti-E2F1 antibodies. |
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Warm fronts are usually preceded by stratiform precipitation and fog. |
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Frontal precipitation typically falls out of nimbostratus clouds. |
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Frontal precipitation is caused by frontal systems surrounding extratropical cyclones or lows, which form when warm and often tropical air meets cooler air. |
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Orographic precipitation is similar, except the upwards motion is forced when a moving airmass encounters the rising slope of a landform such as a mountain ridge. |
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This burnt lime is then slaked in sweet water to produce a calcium hydroxide suspension for the precipitation of impurities in raw juice during carbonatation. |
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