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The heads on all previous tenontosaur specimens were either missing or crushed and fragmented.
Specimens were either restrained, using a stainless steel block, or unrestrained.
The remaining cytologic specimens were either low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions or were normal.
The lengths of the beam-column specimens were either 500 or 1000 mm.
Specimens were either stained with hematoxylin and eosin or used for immunohistochemical reaction with anti-NGF antibody.
Specimens were either cured at room temperature or hydro-thermally treated at 75 °C for five hours.
Similar(26)
Specimens had to be near complete and undistorted in lateral view to be of use in digital surface morphometry, and, accordingly, no skull of Machairodus aphanistus was included in such analyses, because all known specimens are either highly incomplete or have suffered at least some post-mortem distortion.
The minced tissue of the specimens was either placed in 1ml TRI reagent (Molecular Research Center, Cincinnati, USA) and stored at −80°C prior to further RNA isolation, or was processed immediately for DNA and GAG quantification, respectively.
The oldest specimen is either Allium fistulosum or Rosa parvifolia, both collected about the time Joseph Spence was designing gardens.
A specimen was either a medial or lateral tibial plateau, with the total thickness (cartilage and bone) typically 20 mm, to allow sufficient bone for secure fixation in the test rig.
The CZ specimen was either not authenticated or authentication details were not mentioned in majority of the studies, however considering that a majority of the studies were conducted in countries where CZ is cultivated, it is likely that the species used were 'True' cinnamon.
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