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fossilise造句
1 The most important parts, the flowers, rarely fossilise. 2 These rocks contain the fossilised remains of extinct animals. 3 We do not want fossilised museum pieces of countryside but communities with jobs and a living, dynamic and healthy social fabric. 4 Tests on 16 fossilised shellfish showed that acid dating is as accurate as carbon dating. 5 There is the danger that the plan becomes fossilised, static and unresponsive to new intelligence or other changed circumstances. 6 Not only words and epithets fossilise , whole situations can fossilise too. 7 Because hard shells fossilise, and are therefore more readily preserved than soft tissue, scientists had an incomplete and biased view of the marine life that existed during the Ordovician. 8 The brain itself does not fossilise, but the inside of the cranium retains an impression of its contours. 9 The survival of the proteins depends on the way in which bones are fossilised. 10 For a while, until the thaw or rain, these muddy tracks will be fossilised and time will stand still. 11 It seemed almost impossible to many people that such tiny things as micro-organisms could have been fossilised at all. 12 He and the other leaders, at the pinnacle of the fossilised hierarchy they have constructed, seem isolated from reality. 13 In consequence, the only land-living creatures likely to be fossilised are those that happen to fall into water. 14 Erosion or accretion of sand by wind action is evident throughout and soil genesis is truncated by erosion or fossilised by deposition. 15 To avoid sampling bias , they restricted their analysis to one group of animals—the bivalve molluscs—that fossilise well. 16 Protected workers, the bulk of the workforce, cling to their jobs. That tends to fossilise the structure of the economy. 17 Dr Kristian Carlson said: "The actual brain residing within a cranium does not fossilise.