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The first person to see microorganisms was probably the Dutch naturalist Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, who in 1683 described some animalcules, as they were then called, in water, saliva, and other substances.
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However, many species calling in water seem to have developed the opposite strategy by using two vocal sacs (e.g. Pelophylax spp., Trachycephalus spp).
Last night, the local fire brigade were called in to water it but had a problem with their hoses so England, unhappily, had to train on a dry surface.
Helicopters were called in to dump water on the burning fuselage as desperate attempts were made to rescue survivors.
That meant only 19 people had survived the inferno, which was so ferocious that helicopters were called in to dump water over the wreckage before firefighters could get near.
This quantity of water is called, in this work, the direct water use of sector i.
Several years ago, Fick and his colleagues discovered a common psychoactive medication called oxazepam in water samples from the River Fyris, which flows through Uppsala, the fourth largest city in Sweden.
In 2003 she was involved in a musical project called Knife in Water.
Experiments at the Institut Laue-Langevin in France revealed that the soap's magnetic properties come from the surfactant's tendency to form clumps of tiny particles called micelles in water.
Rather, it was a message signalling the end of the use of Morse code for distress calls in French waters.
Water ice, called in French sorbet and in Italian granita, is similar to sherbet but contains no dairy ingredients.
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