Situ Sentence Examples

situ
  • These furrows have apparently been cut in situ with a very accurate engine; for not the slightest departure from parallelism can be detected in any of the movable webs relative to the fixed webs.

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  • The stones were laid without mortar, and many of them are still in situ.

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  • The testimony afforded Sources by inscriptions is often of decisive importance, especially that of commemorative or votive tablets or of boundary = stones found in situ; the value of this evidence is, on the other hand, sometimes neutralized owing to the former removal of building material already used and its in corporation in later structures.

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  • During the 18th century many works of art, which still remained in situ, fell a prey to foreign collectors.

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  • The auditorium is in remarkable preservation, almost every seat being still in situ, except a few where the supporting walls have given way on the wings.

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  • This surface drifting water is cold and as it enters into intermediate zones it remains colder than the water in situ there and is therefore denser; it sinks below the surface and continues to flow along the bottom either back to the polar regions or towards the equator.

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  • The eggs are fertilized, practically in the ovary, and develop in situ.

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  • It is a hexastyle peripteros with fourteen columns on each side, and is remarkably well-preserved, both pediments and the epistyle at the sides being still in situ.

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  • We should therefore probably ascribe the work attributed to him in the Hotel Carnavalet (in situ), together with much else executed in various parts of Paris - but now dispersed or destroyed - to a period intervening between the date of his dismissal from the Louvre and his death, which is computed to have taken place between 1564 and 1568, probably at Bologna.

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  • Thrombosis is an accident of not dissimilar character, whereby a vessel is blocked not by a travelling particle, but by a clotting of the blood in situ, probably on the occasion of some harm to the epithelial lining of the vessel.

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  • In Yemen and Hadramut especially these ruins abound, and in some cases inscriptions seem to be still in situ.

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  • Few are still in situ, the majority having been taken from their original positions and built into houses, mosques or wells of more recent date.

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  • It would have been scarcely possible to cast such statues in one piece in situ, or, if cast elsewhere, to transport them and elevate them on their pedestals.

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  • Probably no extinct animal has left such abundant evidence of its former existence; immense numbers of bones, teeth, and more or less entire carcases, or " mummies," as they may be called, having been discovered, with the flesh, skin and hair in situ, in the frozen soil of the tundra of northern Siberia.

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  • He also wrote at Bethlehem De viris illustribus sive de scriptoribus ecclesiasticas, a church history in biographies, ending with the life of the author; De nominibus Hebraicis, compiled from Philo and Origen; and De situ et nominibus locorum Hebraicorum.'

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  • As a rule the amount of both gases dissolved in sea-water is found to be that which is indicated by the temperature of the water in situ.

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  • On the other hand, the precipitation on the Tibetan plateau is so copious, and so uniformly distributed, that it is able to retain the loosened material in situ, and causes it to heap itself up in rounded masses on the flanks of the mountains that are its primitive source of origin, these projecting in great part like skeletons from the midst of their own ruins."

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  • Varenus Diphilus, a freedman, a magister herculaneus, were found in situ in 1883, and in 1902 two vases of statues erected by Diphilus, as inscriptions showed, in honour of his patron, and a bas-relief of bearded Hercules entirely draped in a long tunic with a lion's skin on his shoulders.

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  • A large number of statues have been found in the villa, and costly foreign marbles and fine mosaic pavements, some of the last being preserved in situ, while among others may be named the mosaic of the doves in the Capitol and that of the masks in the Vatican.

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  • Unfortunately the chapters on the Roman period are entirely marred by the author's having accepted as genuine Bertram's forgery De Situ Britanniae; but otherwise his opinions on controverted topics are worthy of much respect, being founded on a laborious investigation of all the original authorities that were accessible to him.

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  • It is therefore always necessary to check the readings of such an instrument in situ.

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  • The fourth (perhaps the most important) book of Adam's History, variously entitled Libellus de Situ Daniae et reliquarum quae trans Daniam sunt regionum, Descriptio Insularum Aquilonis, &c., has often been considered, but wrongly, as a separate work.

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  • When hardened in situ its shape is that of a right-angled, triangular prism showing five surfaces - superior, anterior, inferior, posterior and right lateral which represents the base of the prism.

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  • In this liver, which was hardened in situ, the impressions of the sacculations of the colon are distinctly visible at the colic impression.

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  • A still more potent absorption is afforded by calcium prepared in situ by heating a mixture of magnesium dust with thoroughly dehydrated quick-lime.

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  • An altar found (in situ) on the south side of the circular enclosure shows by an inscription that this was the Heroum, where worship of the heroes was practised down to a late period.

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  • Sixteen pedestals were here discovered in situ.

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  • Fragments of Jurassic rock have been found amongst the volcanic material on the island of Rotti, but they have not yet been discovered in situ.

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  • There has been much contirversy concerning the nature and origin of the blue ground itself; and even granted that (as is generally believed) the blue ground is a much serpentinized volcanic breccia consisting originally of an olivine-bronzite-biotite rock (the so-called kimberlite), it contains so many rounded and angular fragments of various rocks and minerals that it is difficult to say which of them may have belonged to the original rock, and whether any were formed in situ, or were brought upfrom below as inclusions.

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  • It has until lately been the practice to remove these to the museum at Naples; but the present tendency is to leave them (and even the movable objects found in the houses) in situ with all due precautions as to their preservation (as in the house of the Vettii, of the Silver Wedding, of the Golden Cupids, &c.), which adds immensely to the interest of the houses; indeed, with the l,eip of judicious restoration, their original condition is in large measure reproduced.'

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  • In some cases it has even been possible to recover the original arrangement of the garden beds, and to replant them accordingly, thus giving an appropriate framework to the statues, &c. with which the gardens were decorated, and which have been found in situ.

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  • Rhaetic strata no doubt exist in situ at no great distance under the North Sea.

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  • It has usually been formed by the decomposition in situ of the rock on which it rests, but it is often broken up and re-deposited elsewhere.

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  • Of the 365 bastions which formerly strengthened the walls, however, nearly too are still in situ, and a few of the interesting old gateways have also been preserved.

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  • In a basic neck of this period at Inverell, there are eclogite boulders, containing diamonds in situ; and it is doubtless from these basic volcanic necks that the diamonds of the New England tableland have been derived.

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  • This fact is probably due partly to the actual intrusion of warm water from the Mascarene current east of Madagascar, and partly to the circumstance that the different temperatures of the waters are so compensated by their differences of salinity that they have almost precisely the same specific gravity in situ.

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  • The site of the town is well protected by ravines except on the east; no ancient remains exist in situ, but inscriptions and other relics have been found.

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  • This was the De Situ Britanniae, an elaborate forgery relating to the antiquities of Roman Britain, which first appeared at Copenhagen in the year 1747.

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  • He has there not only demonstrated, from the external and internal evidence alike, the spuriousness of the whole treatise, but in a collation (extending to nearly a hundred pages) of numerous passages with corresponding passages in classical medieval authorities, has also traced out the various sources whence Bertram derived the terminology and the facts which he reproduced in the De Situ.

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  • Little trace of Corinium, however, can be seen in situ, except the amphitheatre and some indications of the walls.

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  • No Archean rocks are exposed in Nebraska, and the sedimentary formations are undisturbed in situ.

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  • He projected a great work on Germany; but of this only the Germania generalis and an historical work in prose, De origine, situ, moribus et institutis Nurimbergae libellus, saw the light.

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  • The majority of patients therefore had 10ml balloon catheters in situ.

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  • Many of the Dartmoor farms still have old granite bee boles in situ.

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  • Undertake pilot studies to develop and refine ex situ conservation techniques for this species and other threatened bryophytes.

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  • The wood burning stove will be kept in situ.

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  • The wax thickness of 0.5mm provides sufficient strength to the finished casting to resist flexing whilst remaining unobtrusive in situ.

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  • Case 61 Traumatic urethral rupture Findings The patient has a suprapubic catheter in situ.

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  • Bladder infil can also be used in patients who have a supra-pubic catheter in situ.

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  • The whole region has been physically mapped to porcine chromosome 6 using in situ hybridisation.

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  • In situ concrete, once installed, is permanent and cannot then be removed.

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  • In situ conservation measures involve designating specific areas as protected sites.

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  • One human cranium which was embedded in a thick stalagmite deposit at the side of the chamber was left in situ.

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  • Leaving standing and fallen deadwood in situ wherever possible should be a long term aim in the management of new urban woodlands.

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  • Techniques using in situ produced cosmogenic nuclides have been developed to date sediments deposited over the past several million years Granger et al.

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  • The S doorway is in situ, the priest's doorway has been reassembled in the S porch.

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  • Brains were rapidly removed for neurobiological assessment of the severity of the chronic inflammatory pain being suffered using in situ hybridisation histochemistry.

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  • These, made from local larch, were put together in the workshops on site, and the finishing touches added in situ.

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  • At Titan, the on-going Cassini mission has been providing a rich dataset of in situ measurements of the ionosphere.

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  • Identify applied research needs related to species recovery Discuss the need for and feasibility of ex situ conservation measures for Brazilian mergansers.

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  • There are also a number of other ways to fabricate the materials, including reactive processes involving in situ polymerization.

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  • There was no viable means of in situ preservation.

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  • Detailed in situ groundwater remediation technology trials, certainly at a research level, are a rarity in the UK.

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  • Where the control of Japanese Knotweed is not feasible in situ the present lack of appropriate facilities will make disposal extremely restrictive to developers.

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  • And, of course, they DELIBERATELY buried a valuable royal scarab in situ!

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  • In a parallel with the development of ocean color sensors there have been major innovations in situ optical sensors.

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  • The bishops, then still in situ, are " Egyptian taskmasters.

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  • These grooves are simultaneously cut in situ by the maker, with the aid of an engine capable of ruling fine straight lines, so that the webs when accurately laid in the grooves are perfectly parallel.

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  • The excavation of the outlying cemetery revealed the unique " Street of the Tombs " and brought to light a great number of sepulchral monuments, many of which remain in situ.

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  • It is believed rather that the condition is due to deleterious toxic substances which act for prolonged periods on the tissue elements and so alter their histon proteins that they combine in situ with other protein substances which are brought by the blood or lymph.

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  • Between the "Cotton Belt" and the Tennessee Valley is the mineral region, the "Old Land" area - "a region of resistant rocks" - whose soils, also derived from weathering in situ, are of varied fertility, the best coming from the granites, sandstones and limestones, the poorest from the gneisses, schists and slates.

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  • In some cases the foliage is preserved in situ; more often, however, especially in the main stem and larger branches, S.C. /,???_ A the leaves had been shed, leaving behind them their scars and persistent bases, on which the characteristic sculpturing of the Lepidodendroid surface depends.

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  • The glass fibers, which are chopped in situ by specially designed applicator vehicles, give tensile strength to the surface and resist cracking.

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  • The wall was left in situ when the graveyard extended to the northwest and shows as a revetted bank.

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  • These had revetted each side of the cellar, and later had rotted in situ.

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  • And, of course, they DELIBERATELY buried a valuable royal scarab in situ !

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  • Some routes may have a bolt in situ below the shale band.

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  • Abstract Radiocarbon is produced within minerals at the earth 's surface (in situ production) by a number of spallation reactions.

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  • The bishops, then still in situ, are Egyptian taskmasters.

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  • A test technique known as fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) may be used to detect this deletion.

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  • Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH)-A technique for diagnosing genetic disorders before birth by analyzing cells obtained by amniocentesis with DNA probes.

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  • The most common surgical procedure performed to correct myopia is laser in situ keratomileusis (LASIK).

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  • Another technique that is used to diagnose the syndrome before birth is called fluorescence in situ hybridization, or FISH.

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