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In most places there is ample depth for all vessels; anchorages are numerous, and extensive surveys have identified practically all hazards to navigation.
The ruins of Roman towns and settlements are numerous, and extensive sites have been excavated at Plovdiv in the southwest, Varna in the northeast, and other locations.
By 1815, the Encyclopedia Londinensis recorded that: "The magnificent squares and streets north of Oxford-street are so numerous and extensive, that they form the largest portion of the fashionable part of the town".
However, these calculations typically require numerous and extensive simulations involving non-physical states of the system of interest, making them computationally demanding and therefore not yet suitable for screening of large sets of compounds.
Due to the numerous and extensive recent changes in business, regulatory, and auditing environments, instructors are faced with difficult choices when designing an introductory auditing course that sufficiently meets the needs of students and the firms that will employ them.
"We have had numerous and extensive conversations with both parties on Capital Hill," said Donovan.
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Finland is heavily forested and contains some 56,000 lakes, numerous rivers, and extensive areas of marshland; viewed from the air, Finland looks like an intricate blue and green jigsaw puzzle.
A similar argument is made by the Yagén Defence Front YDFF) in Peru which is fighting the proposed construction of a 600 MW hydro-electric power project, Chadin 2, which would dam the River Maranon and flood 32.5 square kilometres, numerous villages, and extensive croplands and valleys high in biodiversity.
Numerous studies and extensive criminal investigations have shown that voter impersonation fraud is extremely rare.
With numerous interviews and extensive research behind it, the book presents biographies of three Canadians in United Nations roles in the 1990s: Roméo Dallaire (the "lion"), Lewis MacKenzie (the "fox"), and Louise Arbour (the "eagle").
At the end of the First World War, the British military decided that the.455 calibre gun and cartridge was too large for modern military use and after numerous tests and extensive trials that a pistol in.38 calibre firing a 200-grain (13 g) bullet would be just as effective as the.455 for stopping an enemy.
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