Sentences with phrase «very smallest fragments»

This vintage aqua bottle is going to be used to house a sea glass collection — only the very smallest fragments.
«We send DNA to be sequenced by the Joint Genome Institute, which is part of the U.S. Department of Energy, and they sequence it in lots of very small fragments.
We got the same results looking at a very small fragment as we did a much larger fragment from the same meteorite.
«It's degraded, broken down so you have very small fragments and few copies.
Unfortunately, the presence of long, repetitive DNA, which is common in human and other primate genomes, confuses assembly software and causes it to break the genome into very small fragments.

Not exact matches

«Security is a very fragmented industry, and there are a lot of small companies in this space, and it's important to have a broader spectrum across the different companies to understand who's doing well and what technologies are doing well,» said JMP Securities analyst Erik Suppiger.
I don't think the picture is the actual parchment, as the parchment is described as being very small, a «1 1/2 - by 3 - inch honey - colored fragment» to be exact
It must also be pointed out that these statistics in no way make Emre Can a better player than Steven Gerrard, these figures are a small fragment of what makes up the DNA of a good player and Can has a very, very long way to go before he gets anywhere near Steven Gerrard.
This system is very proportional but it may tend to favour larger parties somewhat if many votes are heavily fragmented across many smaller parties.
Small protein fragments, also called peptides, are promising as drugs because they can be designed for very specific functions inside living cells.
And when a mile - wide comet fragment plummets to Earth and creates a 600 - mph tsunami, the scene was very accurate, except for only a few small details.
The biodegradation of these small fragments then proceeds «very slowly», it notes.
Except that in this case, the fragment was too small to produce anything but a very large, very cold, and extremely isolated planet.
Extensively hydrolysed formulas still contain very small protein fragments, while amino acid - based ones are 100 % free of milk proteins.
While Camp Long - Form is mounting masterful drones about the joys of deep reads and rich narrative immersion, the Don't Blink squad presents a pizzicato counterpoint, talking to us (very fast) about how the «chunking» of bigger works into small pieces is the pathway to our fragmented future.
Another issue is that the Android tablet sector is fragmented and divided, with different companies all fighting one another over what is arguably a small piece of a very large pie - most of which belongs to Apple.
According to the National Science Foundation, «Areas of patchy woods, which are very common in cities and suburban and rural areas, may have higher populations of Lyme - disease carrying ticks than forest fragments... this is because some species thrive in smaller places.»
The patterns which emerge through tearing, pasting and scraping are as much reminiscent of works by Kurt Schwitters or Robert Rauschenberg as they are evocative of Francis Rose's predilection for minor vandalism when surreptitiously removing small samples of particularly attractive wallpapers from French chateaux and English country houses to fashion his very own take on the livre d'or in the 1930s: a scrapbook of wallpaper fragments (acquired by the Whitworth Art Gallery after Rose's 1988 retrospective exhibition at England & Co).
I am writing this statement not quite knowing what the immediate outcome will be, but am aware of the potential collective impact that this distinctive community of creators will have with Brian Belott's innovations in collage, Ákos Birkás's philosophy about painting a certain situation, Regina Bogat's devotion to art making with clever variations on certain abstract themes, Matt Bollinger's extra-large and bracing graphite drawings, Paul DeMuro's painterly electricity, Marc Desgrandchamp's time - fragmented paintings, Michael Dotson's paintings of the «Disney - esque,» Michel Huelin's relationship with nature and software, Irena Jurek's very meaningful cat character, Alix Le Méléder's proposals of four colors determined by the passage of the brush, David Lefebvre's painted images cut out of magazines or downloaded from a mobile phone, Pushpamala N.'s ethnographic documentations which have been compared to Cindy Sherman, Wang Keping's unique wooden sculptures that juxtapose vivid emotion with a marked sense of introversion, Katharina Ziemke's pictorial treatment of current events, and me, the co-host with a small drawing.
These were all large, heavily worked - at paintings each fragmented into a number of shaped parts, and others were in very many small parts, like smashed mirrors.
The Court seems to be cutting up the case in such small fragments that the overall picture gets lost — and as a consequence, a State action that clearly aims at furthering the interests of domestic depositors over foreign ones is very bluntly left outside the scope of the Directive and thus passes muster.
Given that text documents are still very much the core material produced by legal professionals, and that references to text documents will remain the basis for grounded and verifiable legal reasoning regardless of the actors and technologies employed, current generation standards in the legal domain are providing a layered organization of their offerings: presentation - oriented XML is being replaced with structured XML with ample room for metadata and annotations; naming mechanisms based on URIs and IRIs provide linkable anchors both to entire documents and to smaller fragments; and document - oriented ontologies provide the necessary glue between abstract legal reasoning and the textual pieces of supporting evidence.
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