Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Wootton Creek" ¶ 4
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

At and mouth
At the first restaurant he sensibly pulled up to go in for his dinner, and as a consequence did not see Cobb strike the open range at the mouth of the canyon and head straight across the swells for Antler.
At its mouth was the scene of the decisive battle in 405 by which Lysander destroyed the Athenian fleet, ending the Peloponnesian War.
At the semi-enclosed bays with major freshwater inflows, such as head of Finnish Gulf with Neva mouth and head of Bothnian gulf with close mouths of Lule, Tornio and Kemi, the salinity is considerably lower.
At the same time, French lookouts on Heureux, the ninth ship in the French line, sighted the British fleet approximately off the mouth of Aboukir Bay.
At the last minute Godzilla blasts his atomic breath into Biollante's mouth killing the monstrosity.
At the free end of the body is a mouth opening surrounded by one to twelve thin, mobile tentacles.
At this point, the expanded case mouth is also sized back down.
At its mouth it forms a delta in extent.
At the mouth of the Pungwe is the port of Beira.
At its mouth is Ilha Tupinambaranas, an extensive marshy region formed by the Madeira ’ s distributaries.
At any given time, a manatee typically has no more than six teeth in each jaw of its mouth.
At 04. 45 Central European Time, under cover of darkness, the German WW1-era battleship Schleswig-Holstein quietly slips her moorings at her wharf in Danzig harbor, drifts into the center of the channel, and commences firing on the fortress Westerplatte, a Polish army installation at the mouth of the port of Danzig, Poland.
* At the behest of Sir Ferdinando Gorges, Dr. Richard Vines, a physician, passes the winter of 1616 — 17 at Biddeford, Maine, at the mouth of the Saco River, that he calls Winter Harbor.
At 465 river miles ( 750 km ) from the Pacific Ocean at mouth of the Columbia River adjacent to Astoria, Oregon, the Port of Lewiston has the distinction of being the most inland seaport east of the West Coast and Idaho's only seaport.
* April 9 – At the mouth of the Mississippi River, near modern Venice, Louisiana, Robert de La Salle buries an engraved plate and a cross, claiming the territory as La Louisiane for France.
At one time, Wellfleet Harbor included an island known as Billingsgate Island, which sat at the harbor's mouth, to the south of the point.
At the mouth of the Rio Grande, on the Mexican side, was the large commercial port of Bagdad.
At the back of the skull, the coelacanth possesses a hinge, the intracranial joint, which allows it to open its mouth extremely widely.
At one time, the lips of the two women almost touched, so that one singer used the mouth cavity of the other as a resonator, but this is less common in present day.
At its narrowest point between Kent County's Plum Point ( near Newtown ) and the Harford County shore near Romney Creek, the bay is 2. 8 miles ( 4. 5 km ) wide ; at its widest point, just south of the mouth of the Potomac River, it is 30 miles ( 50 km ) wide.
At the time of contact with Europeans, all Mocama villages in present-day Jacksonville were part of the powerful chiefdom known as the Saturiwa, centered around the mouth of the St. Johns River.
At the Battle of the Kentish Knock on 8 October 1652 the Dutch attacked the English fleet near the mouth of the River Thames, but were beaten back with a high number of casualties.
At one point, his mouth would stretch out back " beyond his beardline "; but this was dropped when it got " out of control.
At its mouth is a large estuary on which the port city of Lisbon is situated.
At the mouth of the Achelous River lie the Echinades Islands.

At and estuary
At the estuary of the Isère River, the Teutons and the Ambrones met Marius, whose well-defended camp they did not manage to overrun.
At Cairo, the Nile spreads out over what was once a broad estuary, subsequently filled by silt deposits to form what is now a fertile, fan-shaped delta some 250 km wide at its seaward extremity and extending about 160 km from north to south.
At the start of the 21st century, Sydney faces a significant challenge in the cleanup of the Sydney Tar Ponds, a tidal estuary contaminated with a variety of coal-based wastes from coke ovens that supplied the steel industry.
At this time Wisbech was on the estuary of the River Great Ouse, but silting caused the coastline to move north, and the River Nene was diverted to serve the town.
At 13: 10, Beatty turned northwest and ordered all the British ships to withdraw since the tide had now risen sufficiently for larger German ships to pass out through the Jade estuary.
At the Plum Island estuary, Massachusetts ( U. S. A ), stratigraphic cores revealed that during the 18th and 19th century the marsh prograded over subtidal and mudflat environments to increase in area from 6 km < sup > 2 </ sup > to 9 km < sup > 2 </ sup > after European settlers deforested the land uptream and increased the rate of sediment supply.
At Onna ( Nursling ), the Romans erected a bridge ( probably a wooden one as no trace of stone abutments remains ) across the River Test, below which it widens into its estuary, and there are traces of the Roman road from Nursling to Stoney Cross.
At high tide, the estuary forms a large body of water that is heavily used for water sports especially sailing, windsurfing and water skiing.
At this time, the Lea was a wide, fast flowing river, and the tidal estuary stretched as far as Hackney Wick .< ref >< cite >' Bethnal Green: Communications ', A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 11: Stepney, Bethnal Green ( 1998 ), pp. 88-90 accessed: 15 November 2006 </ cite ></ ref > Evidence of a late Roman settlement at Old Ford, dating from the 4th and 5th centuries, has been found.
At its estuary the river has formed the wide shallow ria of Poole Harbour.
At the Volga estuary, the French were supposed to be joined by Russian forces.
At the confluence of the Elwy and the Clwyd, the river becomes tidal and enters a narrow estuary with lots of wildlife before meeting the Irish Sea at Rhyl.
At Wimborne Minster it is joined by the River Allen, and at its estuary at Christchurch it is joined by the River Avon before it flows through the harbour into the English Channel.
At the time of European colonialization of the Hudson River estuary in the 17th century, much of the west side Upper New York Bay contained large tidal flats which hosted vast oyster beds, a major source of food for the Lenape people who lived there at the time.
At the time of his arrival the estuary of the Taw and Torridge rivers was wooded, as was a portion of Braunton Burrows.
At Wilmington, it receives the Northeast Cape Fear River and Brunswick River, turns south, widening as an estuary and entering the Atlantic approximately 3 miles ( 5 km ) west of Cape Fear.
At Little Ferry, it is joined by the broad Overpeck Creek, then flows southward, widening in a broad meandering tidal estuary through the Meadowlands, forming extensive side streams and wetlands.
At its highest point it stands at only 352 metres ( 1155 feet ), but offers uninterrupted views of the Cumbrian coast from the Ravenglass estuary in the south to the Solway Firth and across to Scotland in the north.
At the estuary of the river dwelt the Beormas, who unlike the nomadic Sami peoples were sedentary, and their land was rich and populous.
At Ayton the Eye Water swings NNE for the final five km leg to its estuary.
At dusk, bats, owls and otters may be seen, while the mudflats of the estuary are favoured by black-headed gulls, redshanks and oystercatchers.
At its mouth the estuary is 500 metres wide but the 20 metre deep ( chart ) channel is only 50 metres wide.
At this point, recognizing the opportunity, Field-Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery, issued a directive that made the opening of the Scheldt estuary the top priority of 21st Army Group.

0.245 seconds.