Sentences with phrase «floating to the surface of»

In a large pot of salted, boiling water, place the pierogies, about 6 at a time, until they float to the surface of the water (about 3 minutes).
As they float to the surface of the water (about 2 minutes) remove them with a slotted spoon to a lightly greased baking sheet to cool.
It was kind of cool when a little cloud of flour would float to the surface of the Maple syrup.
And with tens of millions of monkeys banging away on keyboards, it doesn't take long for some true gems to float to the surface of the resulting sea of schlock.
Upham et al. used nickel dissolved in molten bismuth to pyrolyze methane to release hydrogen and form carbon, which floats to the surface of the melt, where it can be removed.
This chemical additive is found in sports drinks and citrus - flavored sodas since it prevents the flavoring from separating and floating to the surface of these beverages.
A black - and - white head shot of a movie star from a different era floated to the surface of Cassie's mind.
The pictures do not so much reveal themselves as rise and fall, floating to the surface of perception and sinking back again.
The content of the works hover between abstraction and representation, depicting film titles that appear as if they are fading into obscurity while the names of the stars seemingly float to the surface of the picture plane.

Not exact matches

It is producing a «Submaran»: an unmanned device that can float on the surface of the ocean and also drive 200 meters under the water to monitor pipelines, currents, temperature or whatever a customer might want.
The Pope drops a hand grenade into a sea of Catholics and then watches their dead bodies float to the surface.
Its rigid compositional attempt to define a rational space is undermined by the floating figures and particularly by the raw application of paint, which sits on the surface of the canvas and reminds us of its autonomous nature as scraped pigment.
Enveloped in the blue mist of oxygen which its life breathes, it floats at exactly the right distance from the sun to enable the higher chemisms to take place on its surface.
You can Troy, but the smaller your apple pieces, the more chances that one tiny pieces will float to the surface and form mould (not the good kind of mould).
NOTE: If you would prefer that your cream cheese not float to the surface when you bake your quiche, just layer half of the salmon mixture on the bottom of the pan, then add your cream cheese, and then spread the second half of the salmon mixture on top.
We would soak the beans overnight then boil the crap out of them the next day, then we had them in a large container and would run cool water over them, stirring them occasionally, and the skin would kind of float to the surface allowing us to skim it off.
At that point the beans will fall to the bottom of the pot and the skins will float near the surface of the water where they can be skimmed off.
Before cooking, regardless of method, skim off the any skins that floated to the surface, drain the soaking liquid, and then rinse them with clean water.
I've seen people use bowls that are small enough to just float on the surface of the water, though, and apparently it works for them!
Inspired by the «unique surface of the moon» and «the sensation of floating in space», the black aluminium bottle design includes a «wicking» insert that allows the beer to flow in zero gravity.
Cook gnocchi in a large pot of boiling salted water, stirring occasionally, until gnocchi float to the surface, about 2 minutes (slightly longer if frozen).
Working in batches, cook gnocchi in large pot of boiling salted water until they float to the surface, about 2 minutes.
Working in 2 batches, cook gnocchi in large pot of boiling salted water until very tender, 15 to 17 minutes (gnocchi will float to surface but may come to surface before being fully cooked).
The lights are low, soft music gently floats through the air, your thoughts drift as you sink onto a decadently covered surface where you delve into relaxation and begin to part with all of your daily tensions...
Moving the Thruway's portfolio to another entity has been talked about for years: It was floated amid talk of possible Thruway toll hikes, and bobbed to the surface again as the Thruway Authority began the construction of the Tappan Zee Bridge replacement, which has an estimated cost of $ 4 billion.
Suspensions of nanoparticles are possible because the interaction of the particle surface with the solvent is strong enough to overcome differences in density, which usually result in a material either sinking or floating in a liquid.
As it floated through the last 12 kilometers to the surface, the probe would have sniffed for sulfur and carbon, possible evidence of recent volcanic venting.
Once they are dispersed, the tiny droplets of oil are more likely to sink or remain suspended in deep water rather than floating to the surface and collecting in a continuous slick.
«When I looked at that video and saw the hydrate floating to the top of those tubes underwater, I thought, «What if we had a tube going all the way from where hydrates form at depth to the [ocean] surface
After parting ways with Cassini, the probe will drop into Titan's atmosphere, open a parachute, and float down to the surface, taking measurements every step of the way.
Although CryoSat - 2 is designed to measure changes in the ice sheet elevation, these can be translated into horizontal motion at the grounding line using knowledge of the glacier and sea floor geometry and the Archimedes principle of buoyancy — which relates the thickness of floating ice to the height of its surface.
Then last summer at Hydrate Ridge they discovered something that they had never seen before: Fizzing chunks of hydrate, some the size of refrigerators, broke off the seafloor a kilometer deep and floated to the surface before disintegrating.
A pair of young INHS biologists stood above them in the bow holding dip nets on poles; their job was to snag the shocked specimens that would float to the surface.
They analyzed the magnetism of ancient rocks to work out their locations on the globe over time, and measured how the material under Earth's crust, the mantle, moves the continents that float on its surface.
By 2100, climate change could be responsible for a massive die - off on the ocean floor, due to a paucity of nutrients floating down from the surface.
The tank is divided into two by a piston which is connected to a large float on the surface of the sea and so moves up and down with the tides.
Some native seaweeds might be able to compete with the alien kelp but over centuries of cultivation Japanese farmers selected strains that grow easily on artificial and floating surfaces, giving it an advantage on sea walls and pilings.
A truth that floated to the surface during the BP energy company's Deepwater disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, along with hundreds of millions of liters of oil, is that the world does not have a ready replacement for conventional forms of fuel such as crude oil and likely will not have one for some time, particularly as demand for energy grows worldwide.
Structures that look like ice rafts are floating in a refrozen matrix; the remarkable absence of craters there points to a geologically active surface and hints that liquid water may have welled up from below in the recent past.
Impurities stick to the bubbles which float at the surface where a skimmer takes case of the rest.
The tags, which travel with the animal on its descent to the clouds of shrimplike krill, measure the animal's speed, depth, orientation and the number of times it beats its tail; they then pop off and float to the surface, ready to be retrieved by pursuing biologists.
But to scientists» surprise, plumes of oil extending several kilometers were floating roughly 1,000 meters beneath the surface, where the toxic compounds are literally washing off the oil and contaminating the water.
Mapping and seafloor observations revealed that, of the material that erupted, which was nearly 1.5 times larger than the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens, about 75 percent floated to the surface and drifted away with winds and currents.
But Tang found that when cystine was removed, the cells swelled up and floated to the surface, a sure sign of necrotic death.
Among the findings was that dispersants were able to eliminate about 21 percent the oil that floated on the surface of the Gulf of Mexico after the spill, but at the cost of spreading the remaining oil over a 49 percent larger area.
The researchers were able to see signs of watery adaptation not seen in other dinosaurs: a small nostril located far back on the head, apparently to limit water intake; relatively long forelimbs; big flat feet suitable for paddling as well as walking on muddy ground; and very dense limb bones, which would have allowed Spinosaurus to submerge itself rather than float at the surface.
Other research has found that sea ice is a natural reservoir of iron, which is captured by ice crystals as they form in deeper water and float to the surface.
About half of the floats have now surfaced and relayed records of their daily positions to satellites passing overhead, says Amy Bower, a physical oceanographer at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts and an OSNAP principal investigator.
To listen for clues about how such icebergs eventually break apart, geophysicists Douglas MacAyeal of the University of Chicago and Emile Okal of Northwestern University planted seismographs on the surface of iceberg B15A, a 71 - mile - long block of ice with the distinction of being the world's largest free - floating object.
Bacteria, however, have remained Earth's most successful form of life — found miles deep below as well as within and on surface rock, within and beneath the oceans and polar ice, floating in the air, and within as well as on Homo sapiens sapiens; and some Arctic thermophiles apparently even have life - cycle hibernation periods of up to a 100 million years while waiting for warmer conditions underneath increasing layers of sea sediments (Lewis Dartnell, New Scientist, September 20, 2010; and Hubert et al, 2010).
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