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water pocket
noun
A waterhole in the bed of an intermittent stream, especially the bowl at the foot of a cliff over which the stream leaps when in the flood stage.
Exact(7)
"One worry is that the water could dry up, or that someone could drill into one of the veins feeding our water pocket and absorb the water," says Aguilar Zeballos.
"What we see is consistent with a water pocket of about 8-10km in depth, and this pocket can extend up to southern latitudes of 50 degrees around the pole," the Sapienza University of Rome researcher explained.
The main conformation, labeled 1, has the hydroxyl pointed toward the deacylation water pocket.
(C ) A 180° rotation of B showing a different view of the water pocket.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.01496.010 10.7554/eLiFigure96.011 Figure 4 figure supplement 3. Conservation of a water pocket lining the electron path between Q1B and Fx.
This water pocket is positioned between Q1B and Fx and can potentially modify the ET rates between the A and B branches of PSI.
Similar(53)
The sides and base inflate; water pockets weigh it down.
After aging at 60 °C for 112 days, Computed Tomography detected preferentially situated water pockets.
It was hypothesized that old water pockets, defined both spatially and temporally, may be established during infiltration.
Tailing observed in some conservative tracer breakthrough curves suggests the formation of immobile resident water pockets which slowly exchange mass with the flowing water fraction.
By the next morning the wind had died down, the water pocketed in the rocks, and sunbathing was the order of the day.
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