| sediment |
Topsoil, sand, and minerals washed from the land into water, usually after rain or snow melt. Sediments collecting in rivers, reservoirs, and harbors can destroy fish and wildlife habitat and cloud the water so that sunlight cannot reach aquatic plants. Loss of topsoil from farming, mining, or building activities can be prevented through a variety of erosion-control techniques.
Ãâó: www.nsc.org/ehc/glossar2.htm
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| sed rate |
(noun) lab test of speed at which erythrocytes settle. Blood to which an anticoagulant has been added is placed in a long tube and the distance the red cells fall in one hour is the rate (ESR) . The speed at which cells settle depends on the size of the clumps into which the red cells aggregate, and the size of clumps appears to depend on the amount of fibrinogen in the blood. It is a non-specific indicator of disease, esp. ...
Ãâó: www.orgsites.com/fl/adjuvantdisease/_pgg9.php3
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| sedentary |
remaining in one area; not active
Ãâó: www.kentuckyawake.org/templates/glossary/
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| sedative |
a drug that reduces mental activity and excitement and/or induces sleep.
Ãâó: www.sfaf.org/treatment/beta/b36/b36glos.html
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| sedimentation |
settling of particulate matter in water related to particle size, water velocity, and water flow.
Ãâó: www.nps.gov/plants/restore/library/glossary.htm
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| SED | the quality of constantly diligent and attentive |
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| SED | marked by care and persistent effort |
| SED | in a sedulous manner |
| SED | the quality of constantly diligent and attentive |
| SED | any of various plants of the genus Sedum |
| SED | mossy European creeping sedum with yellow flowers |
| SED | Eurasian mountain plant with fleshy pink-tipped leaves and a cluster of yellow flowers |
| SED | perennial northern temperate plant with toothed leaves and heads of small purplish-white flowers |
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