pattern of damageの例文
- The earthquake caused different patterns of damage in different parts of Luzon Island.
- Also, there is not a distinct pattern of damage that leads to the syndrome.
- The pattern of damage showed that clockwise winds surrounded the center of the tornado.
- A different pattern of damage might have averted disaster.
- Pattern of damage to albino Great Frigatebird flight feathers supports hypothesis of abrasion by airborne particles.
- Six different patterns of damage have been reported in NMO, raising the possibility of five different types of AQP4-negative variants.
- The pattern of damage occurs because the toxin affects nerves that fire ( depolarise ) at a higher frequency first.
- Shifting weather patterns during the 10 days that the reactor burned produced a checkerboard pattern of damage, toxicologist Cham Dallas said.
- By studying patterns of damage to the victims, the investigators had helped to rule out a possible bomb in the cabin.
- Investigators drew the new conclusion from close examination of patterns of damage to the fuel-tank wreckage, which was recently brought to shore.
- The pattern of damage to the heads ( notably to noses ) suggests that they were deliberately damaged as a result of iconoclasm.
- There is not one specific pattern of damage that leads to DES, as multiple affected brain structures and locations have led to the symptoms.
- Specifically, patterns of damage in conduction aphasia patients have been observed to cluster in the posterior and inferior temporal lobe, and in the parietal-temporal junction.
- William Klinefelter, legislative director of the United Steelworkers of America, said Friday's decision is further evidence of a pattern of damages caused by imported steel.
- While the pattern of damage to the fuel tank shows that it did explode, no one knows the cause, mechanical malfunction or an explosive device.
- The researchers from the university and its Savannah River Ecology Laboratory near Aiken, S . C ., found a checkerboard pattern of damage, said toxicologist Cham Dallas.
- The disastrous northeasters of December 1992 and March 1993 provided a foretaste of the pattern of damage to be expected from this convergence of factors, Coch writes.
- The analysis, to be conducted in high-speed wind tunnels, will look at four possible patterns of damage and how the wing's temperature and stability would be affected under each.
- The pattern of damage is distinct from that of caterpillars later in the year, as earwigs characteristically remove semicircles of petal and leaf tissue from the tips, rather than internally.
- In a study published in the June issue of Annals of Neurology, the researchers described finding four consistent separate patterns of damage to the covering of nerves in the brain.