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  1. Plate tectonics (27764 bytes)
    10: ...''plate boundary'', and plate boundaries are commonly associated with geological events such as earthq...
    17: ...ur where plates slide, or perhaps more accurately grind, past each other along [[transform fault]]s. The...
    19: ...ur where two plates slide towards each other commonly forming either a [[subduction]] zone (if one pla...
    37: ...ce, forming long chains of [[volcano|volcanoes]] inland from the continental shelf and parallel to it....
    63: ...g of material at mid-ocean ridges is almost certainly part of this convection. Some early models of pl...
  2. Cell (biology) (28190 bytes)
    27: ...' cells are structurally simple. They are found only in single-celled and [[Colony (biology)|colonial...
    49: ...les contained in it. The term ''cytosol'' refers only to the fluid itself.
    63: ...ne or more vital functions. Organelles are found only in eukaryotes and are, with a few exceptions, su...
    69: ...ve their own genome. Chloroplasts and are found only in photosynthetic eukaryotes like plants and [[a...
    193: *[[Flagellum]] (only in gametes)
  3. Hubble Space Telescope (50930 bytes)
    54: ...s can be clearly distinguished) would be limited only by [[diffraction]], rather than by the turbulenc...
    79: ...ticated computer-controlled polishing machines to grind the mirror to the required shape, but in case the...
    88: ...quately withstand frequent passages from direct sunlight into the darkness of Earth's [[shadow]] which...
    117: ... meant that images from the Space Telescope were only marginally better than the best images obtainabl...
    163: ... old, more rigid arrays entered and left direct sunlight.
  4. Ostrich (8135 bytes)
    26: ...are the biggest eyes of all living land animals; only [[whale]]s have bigger ones.
    30: ...r, now extinct, [[Aepyornis]]. Ostriches are the only members of their [[family (biology)|family]], ''...
    46: ... Lacking teeth, they swallow pebbles that help to grind the swallowed foods in the [[gizzard]]. They can ...
    50: ...se they deliberately swallow sand/pebbles to help grind up their food. When lying down and hiding from pr...
  5. Causes of the Great Depression (21364 bytes)
    1: ...onomic downturn beginning in the late 1920's and only ended by the beginning of [[World War II]] in Eu...
    32: ... had eased, that this cycle would have continued unless monetary policy overshot and produced outright...
    70: ...ry setting that would over the next decade slowly grind away at the health of many European economies. Wh...
    80: ...on. The banking system as a whole, moreover, was only very loosely regulated by the [[Federal Reserve ...
    94: ...pe. Thus debts (and reparations) were being paid only by augmenting old debts and piling up new ones. ...
  6. Anteater (6362 bytes)
    1: ...100px|left|]]'''Anteaters''' are [[mammal]]s commonly known for eating [[ant]]s and [[termite]]s. The ...
    6: Its food consists mainly of [[termite]]s, which it obtains by opening the...
    8: ...as hardened folds and uses strong contractions to grind the insects; a digestive process assisted by smal...
    10: ...fer essentially from it in their habits, being mainly arboreal. They inhabit the dense primeval forest...
    16: ...fer essentially from it in their habits, being mainly tree-dwelling. They inhabit the dense primeval f...
  7. Cell (29541 bytes)
    27: ...' cells are structurally simple. They are found only in single-celled and [[Colony (biology)|colonial...
    49: ...les contained in it. The term ''cytosol'' refers only to the fluid itself.
    63: ...ne or more vital functions. Organelles are found only in eukaryotes and are, with a few exceptions, su...
    69: ...ve their own genome. Chloroplasts and are found only in photosynthetic eukaryotes like plants and [[a...
    193: *[[Flagellum]] (only in gametes)
  8. Molar (tooth) (1877 bytes)
    3: ...tooth]] in most [[mammal]]s. In many mammals they grind food; hence the name, which means "millstone". Mo...
  9. Chicory (2512 bytes)
    27: :'''Curly endive''' (sometimes mistakenly called chicory in the [[United States]]) has gre...
    32: ...coffee and add into coffee one for one...or boil only the ground chicory (one spoon per cup) for three...
  10. Earthworms (15728 bytes)
    18: ...thworm]]. Amongst the main earthworm species commonly found in the soil are the red coloured ''[[Lumbr...
    20: In temperate zone areas, the most commonly seen earthworms are lumbricids ([[Lumbricidae]])...
    30: ...e earthworms die quickly when exposed to direct sunlight with its strong [[UV]] content.
    51: ... into its 'crop' wherein minute fragments of grit grind everything into a fine paste which is then digest...
    53: ...l'', Tagari Press, 1988)- thus the earthworm not only creates passages for air and water to traverse, ...
  11. Ostriches (8135 bytes)
    26: ...are the biggest eyes of all living land animals; only [[whale]]s have bigger ones.
    30: ...r, now extinct, [[Aepyornis]]. Ostriches are the only members of their [[family (biology)|family]], ''...
    46: ... Lacking teeth, they swallow pebbles that help to grind the swallowed foods in the [[gizzard]]. They can ...
    50: ...se they deliberately swallow sand/pebbles to help grind up their food. When lying down and hiding from pr...
  12. Saiga (2981 bytes)
    14: ...97.5% of this population has been wiped out, and only 30,000 remain.
    18: ... $45/pound ($100 per kilogram) and Chinese people grind them up to make medicines for fighting fevers.
  13. Frog zoology (7395 bytes)
    7: ...jaw called the maxillary teeth, which are used to grind food before swllowing. These teeth are very weak,...
    22: ... embryonic frog hatches into a larval stage, commonly referred to as a tadpole. Frog larvae have short...
  14. Edmontosaurus (4846 bytes)
    27: ...s as lower jaw came up, so the [[mandible]] could grind against it. Typical food would have included [[co...
    29: ...ee, and the whole thigh was under the skin. This only contributes to its resemblance to a duck. It als...
    31: ... the power of the limbs, ''Edmontosaurus'' would only have been slow-moving and had few defensive feat...
  15. Unicycle (4804 bytes)
    8: ...es between 10 and 15 days at the least to learn, unless one has an inherent natural ability for riding...
    13: ...s hit a bump, or the rider attempted to slow suddenly, the rear wheel would come off the ground, forci...
    16: ...unicycling]]. It consists of stair riding, jumps, grinds, spins, and rail riding usually on urban obstacl...
    30: ...e the wheels are stacked on top of each other so only one touches the ground. The wheels are linked to...
  16. Boulton and Watt (684 bytes)
    7: ... engine, built by Boulton and Watt in [[1785]] to grind malt in [[Samuel Whitbread (brewer)|Whitbread]]'s...

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