Results 241 to 250 of about 186,110 (300)
Does rainfall create buoyant forcing at the ocean surface? [PDF]
Chaudhuri D, D'Asaro EA.
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Learning agility, self-efficacy, and resilience as pathways to mental health in higher education: insights from a mixed-methods study. [PDF]
Huang H, Kou H.
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Warm rings in mesoscale eddies in a cold straining ocean. [PDF]
Dong H +11 more
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Experimental Investigation of the directional collapse and microjet dynamics of single acoustic bubbles in confined tubes. [PDF]
Wu H +6 more
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2015
The buoyancy of ammonoids is one of the most controversial issues of ammonoid paleobiology. This chapter gives a short historical review about attempts made to clarify the potential function of the cephalopod chambered shell (phragmocone) and ammonoid life habits either as benthic crawler or as free swimmers in the water column.
Hoffmann, René +3 more
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The buoyancy of ammonoids is one of the most controversial issues of ammonoid paleobiology. This chapter gives a short historical review about attempts made to clarify the potential function of the cephalopod chambered shell (phragmocone) and ammonoid life habits either as benthic crawler or as free swimmers in the water column.
Hoffmann, René +3 more
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Journal of Semantics, 2000
The chief characteristic of presuppositio ns is that they tend to take wide scope, yet most theories of presupposition, the author's not excepted, fail to provide an explanation of this fact. Recently, however, it has been suggested that a principled explanation can be given in terms of informativeness: the idea is that presuppositions simply prefer ...
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The chief characteristic of presuppositio ns is that they tend to take wide scope, yet most theories of presupposition, the author's not excepted, fail to provide an explanation of this fact. Recently, however, it has been suggested that a principled explanation can be given in terms of informativeness: the idea is that presuppositions simply prefer ...
openaire +2 more sources
2021
There is a curious, intuitive fascination about buoyancy at great depths in the ocean. It was reported of ancient mariners that they feared burial at sea because they thought that the weighted body would only sink so far and no further. In some confused way, they thought the depths prevented the body sinking further, so it would drift with the currents.
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There is a curious, intuitive fascination about buoyancy at great depths in the ocean. It was reported of ancient mariners that they feared burial at sea because they thought that the weighted body would only sink so far and no further. In some confused way, they thought the depths prevented the body sinking further, so it would drift with the currents.
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Nature, 1988
The Natural History of Nautilus. By Peter D. Ward. Unwin Hyman: 1987. Pp.267. £35, $34.95. Nautilus: The Biology and Paleobiology of a Living Fossil. Edited by W. Bruce Saunders and Neil H. Landman. Plenum: 1988. Pp.632. $95 (North America), $114 (elsewhere).
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The Natural History of Nautilus. By Peter D. Ward. Unwin Hyman: 1987. Pp.267. £35, $34.95. Nautilus: The Biology and Paleobiology of a Living Fossil. Edited by W. Bruce Saunders and Neil H. Landman. Plenum: 1988. Pp.632. $95 (North America), $114 (elsewhere).
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1987
Since the pioneering efforts of Eric Denton and John Gilpin-Brown (1966), much has been learned about the buoyancy system of the chambered Nautilus. It seems timely, therefore, to evaluate critically what is known and not known about the buoyancy system of Nautilus, rather than merely to restate what has gone before. In particular, we will discuss what
Lewis Greenwald, Peter D. Ward
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Since the pioneering efforts of Eric Denton and John Gilpin-Brown (1966), much has been learned about the buoyancy system of the chambered Nautilus. It seems timely, therefore, to evaluate critically what is known and not known about the buoyancy system of Nautilus, rather than merely to restate what has gone before. In particular, we will discuss what
Lewis Greenwald, Peter D. Ward
openaire +1 more source

