RMJ3D44E–people cleaning their feet near the mud flat of Nessmersiel - Nessmersiel, Lower Saxony, Niedersachsen, Germany, Europe, EU
RM2PFGY8F–Farmers wellies in mud. North Yorkshire, UK.
RF2R19XWD–Yellow old vintage forged cast antique faucet, faucet, brass fittings, copper for drinking, washing feet and hands. The background.
RMEBK54C–duck track in the mud, Germany
RFPNJBT2–Cute young seagull staying in a transparent water on a stony oozed sea shore
RFRNR1F8–Image of two black fish swimming under water against the background of overgrown bottom. Selective focus.
RM2AJ7Y07–Report of the Commissioner of Fisheries to the Secretary of Commerce and Labor for the fiscal year ended .. . ar symbols. Hard bottom is shown by solid black circles, ooze by circles with ahorizontal diameter, and intermediate consistencies by intermediate symbols. Themore open the circle, the softer is the bottom which it represents. Not all stations atwhich the bottom was tested are shown, the purpose being to indicate the generalcharacter and the transitions from one to the other. Depths are expressed in feet and refer to mean low water. The triangulation stations of the United States Coast
RFADPRG6–Sneaker stepping in pink sludge
RMEBK54D–duck track in the shore mud of a river, Germany
RM2AXJ1CE–Chambers's encyclopaedia; a dictionary of universal knowledge for the people . a slimy ooze, composed for the mostpart of the chalk-producing globigerina; in very deep parts this isreplaced by a brown, clay-lilie mud, with few traces of animalforms. Regardini; the depth of the A., it is only recently that reliabledata have been obtained; along certain tracts, especially those ofthe Challenger, the profile of the bottom can now be laid downwitli considerable certainty. The deepest sounding made by theOhallengermth itsimproved method of sounding (see SoDNDINGs),is 3875fathoms, or 23,250 feet, at
RMEBKG0W–single footprint of a duck in the mud, Germany
RMCNT8AE–little egret (Egretta garzetta), bird tracks in the dry mud, Greece, Peloponnes, Lagune von Gialova, Gialova
RM2AJKDWT–Glimpses of our national parks . ,000,000 years ago, before the continent of North America hademerged in its present outlines from the sea, the shales which nowloom so loftily in Glacier National Park were deposited as sedimentsin the waters. Over these muds thick beds of ooze solidified intolimestones, and over the limestones more sediments deposited andturned to shales. It is these very strata, now hardened into rocks,that streak so picturesquely the sides of Glacier precipices thousandsof feet above us. The story of their elevation from deep-sea bottomsto these giddy heights is a romantic c
RM2AXH347–A tour through the Pyrenees . The turfthat they nourish is of an incomparable freshnessand vigor; the herbage grows thick along thebrink, bathes its feet in the water, or lies under therush of the little waves, and its ribbons tremble in apearly reflection under the ripples of silver. Youcannot walk ten steps without stumbling upon awaterfall; swollen and boiling cascades pour downupon great blocks of stone; transparent sheetsstretch themselves over the rocky shelves ; thread-like streaks of foam wind from the verge to thevery valley; springs ooze out alongside the hang-ing grasses and fall dr
RM2AG69CF–. St. Nicholas [serial]. s along and seizes its food. Instead of blunt, irregular make-believe feet, some have straight,slender rays two or three times as Many of these These rays are extended nearly all long as the body. One of theseothers live in the ocean, while ! is the sun-animalcule, common still others live in fresh water, or even in damp among floating plants in standing water. Itplaces on land. In fact, they occur almost any- is so namedwhere that is not too dry andthe water is clean. We canfind them on the bark oftrees, on the drippingrocks near waterfalls,in the ooze at the bot-tom
RM2CNEY4J–. The aquatic birds of Great Britain and Ireland . Fig. 37.—avocet. This is a handsome and remarkable-looking bird, ofslender build and very graceful bearing, which with its piedplumage render it an easily identified species on the sea-shore. Its beak is unmistakable ; it is of considerable length,tapers to a sharp point, and is recurved or bent upwards AVOCET 253 like a surgeons needle.^ Its legs and feet are long andslender, and its toes are partially webbed (figs. 37 and 39.) The Avocet is a bird of the coast. It delights to probe inthe soft ooze of tidal estuaries, where it obtains an abun
RM2CNF3JJ–. The aquatic birds of Great Britain and Ireland . know it. But let the gunner try to approach them—be it ever so stealthily—on the strand, and ere he getwithin two hundred yards of them off they fly. Withthe aid of my field-glass I have been able to view thesebirds so that they seemed to appear almost at my feet.On several occasions I have had the good fortune to arriveat their feeding-grounds before them, and have watcheda flock fly in from the sea and pitch on the ooze. Thebirds almost immediately begin to feed, with the exceptionof perhaps one or two which may look about for a fewminutes,
RM2CNCEKE–. The Bell System technical journal . Fig. 15 — Seamount photographs taken near summit of seamount on BermudaRise at 34°38N, 56°53W at depth of 1,370 fathoms. The two photos were takenabout 100 feet apart, indicating the rapid alternation of ooze and rock bottom overshort distances. The crest of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge is similar, as a bottom type, to jthe seamounts previously described. Dredge hauls have brought up |mostly basalt, although a few fragments of limestone have also been |retrieved. The photographs shown in Fig. 16 were taken about 60 feet apart on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. They illu
RM2CNCEKC–. The Bell System technical journal . Fig. 1457°22W. Abyssal-liills photograph taken at 3,190-fatliom depth at 29°17X, 107-1 THE BELL SYSTEM TECHNICAL JOUKNAL, SEPTEMBER 1957. Fig. 15 — Seamount photographs taken near summit of seamount on BermudaRise at 34°38N, 56°53W at depth of 1,370 fathoms. The two photos were takenabout 100 feet apart, indicating the rapid alternation of ooze and rock bottom overshort distances. The crest of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge is similar, as a bottom type, to jthe seamounts previously described. Dredge hauls have brought up |mostly basalt, although a few fragments of
RM2CE4MC2–. Wholesale price list : fall 1912 . 25 00 6 to 8 feet .Ogle 17 50 5 to 6 feet - - ..Ogre 15 00 KOLREUTERIA paniculata, (Varnish Tree) 5 to 6 feet Oil 3 00 4 to 5 feet- - Olio 2 50 LARIX europaea, (European Larch) 6 to 8 feet-- - -. Olive 4 00 5 to 6 feet - Omega 3 00 4 to 5 feet -- - - -- Omen 2 00 LIRIODENDRON tulipfera, (Tulip Tree) 1% to 2 inches, 10 to 12 feet Omit 6 00 Wi to W2 inches, 8 to 10 feet - Once 4 00 1 to IV4 inches, 8 to 10 feet On ion 30 00 6 to 8 feet - - .Onset 20 00 5 to 6 feet Otnvard 15 00 MAGNOLIA acuminata, 3 to 4 feet .Onus 2 50 grandiflora, 4 to 5 feet - Ooze 7 50 3
RMRJRHE7–. The Australian Museum magazine. Natural history. 52 THE AUSTRALIAN MUSEUM MAGAZINE. importance to the fauna in the depths of the sea. On land, plants occur al- most everywhere and support the ani- mal population either directly or in-. A Sea-Lily. These llower-animals of the ocean grow in dense fields on the floor of the deep sea; their roots are fixed in the ooze, above which the slender, jointed stalks rear for about two feet, and spread into graceful petals. These wave about seeking for victims to en- fold and devour. In marble slabs are often seen the fossil stems oi encrinites, similar
RMRH2GWR–. British birds. Birds. VOL. VI.] SPRING-NOTES ON THE BORDERS. Ill eight feet deep, and possibly more, of rotten ooze, semi- liquid. Their nests are usually near the open water, say only a yard or two inside the fringing jungle of dense swamp-vegetation, and often amidst those of Black- headed Gulls which nest by hundreds in such situations, and are compactly constructed of dead reeds, etc.. y •" POCHARD DIVIXG. (Greenlee Lough, February 23.) {Drawn by A. Chapman.) Pochards' eggs are distinctly larger, paler, and, to my eye, less green than those of Tufted Ducks, and are laid a trifle ear
RMRG46T4–. California fish and game. Fisheries -- California; Game and game-birds -- California; Fishes -- California; Animal Population Groups; Pêches; Gibier; Poissons. THE FISHERY OP CLEAR LAKE 443 TRACED FROM HYDROGRAPHIC SURVEY CLEAR LAKE CALIFORNIA SUBJECT TO VERIFICATION BY THE WASHINGTON OFFICE L.O COLBERT, DIRECTOR US COAST a GEODETIC SURVEY WASHINGTON D. C. NOVEMBER 15 1948 TO JANUARY 7 1949 SCALE I 31,250 SOUNDINGS IN FEET AT ZERO RUMSET GAGE, KEPORT, CALIF NOTE A THIN LAYER OF OOZE OVERLIES MOST OF THE LAKE BOTTOM REACHING A THICKNESS OF ABOUT 3 FEET STATUTE MILES -853,624 ACRE FT. ATORUMSE
RMRDX6PK–. Natural history. Zoology. C62 ECHINODERMA—CLASS HOLOTHUROIDEA. (M) at the anterior end, and the anus (As) at the posterior. The row of tube-feet passes down the middle of the under surface, between the mouth and anus. On either side of these tube-feet, and well seen in the side-view, is a row of podgy stumps, by which the animal moves as a centipede moves by its legs. Behind the anus a part of the body is prolonged into a flat tail. These animals live on the ooze of the abyssal ocean, gorging themselves therewith. Some of the holothurians that live in the sand of the deep sea, by constantly
RMRCJKGH–. Elements of geology : a text-book for colleges and for the general reader. Geology. 472 MESOZOIC EKA—AGE OF REPTILES. Origin of Chalk.—A material so unique must have been formed under peculiar conditions. Eecent investigations have shown that chalk is a deep-sea ooze. In all the deep-sea soundings and dredgings recently undertaken, it is found that the sea-bottom between the depths of 3,000 and 20,000 feet, where not too cold, is a white ooze, consisting mainly of Ehizopod shells (Globigerina, Eadiolaria, etc.) and Coccoliths, Coccsopheres, etc., through which are scattered silicious shells
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