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Puzzled and by
Puzzled by the geographical distribution of wildlife and fossils he collected on the voyage, Darwin investigated the transmutation of species and conceived his theory of natural selection in 1838.
Puzzled by the mystery, Essex discovers that Redstone had previously checked into the Hotel Electra, a gambling resort in another sector.
Puzzled by the results, Crosse mentioned the incident to a couple of friends.
However, this figure had reached 18 percent by 1967 ( Gallup, 1993 ), only to increase further to a sizable 29 percent by 1979, a good six-fold increase on the earlier " Puzzled People " figure.
" Puzzled at this response, the envoys eventually followed his advice and returned to Carthage where they were taken prisoner by the victorious Byzantines.
In " The Puzzled Patriots ," by Bruce Muirden, Melbourne University Press 1968, page 128 refers to a bashing of Mills by an army officer at Loveday Internment Camp in South Australia.

Puzzled and she
Puzzled, Lawrence finally opens up the bag and finds a note from Janet instead admitting that she indeed took the $ 50, 000 and that she was The Jackal all along.
Puzzled, the fairies follow her to her home and discover that she has given birth to twin wizards.
In 1988, she also published her own book, titled Pieces of a Puzzled Mind.

Puzzled and were
Recent events such as the Russian Civil War were depicted in shorts like Felix All Puzzled ( 1924 ).
Puzzled, Wu Song remembered back to his own martial arts master who had told him there were only two people in the world ( including Wu Song and his master ) who could perform such boxing.

Puzzled and Francis
* A Puzzled Painter, co-written with Francis Clement Philips, was published after his death.

Puzzled and for
" Puzzled Steele " earned Doris Roberts an Emmy nomination for best supporting actress.
Puzzled supporters questioned Woods and chairman John Fenty over the decision which was later revealed to be because the player was considered to be a disruptive influence and wasn't turning up for training.
" Puzzled, the man explained that he had not turned on the light for them – and in fact, could not turn on the light.

Puzzled and which
" Puzzled, the cleric ordered the cleric to explain the " true faith " to which Tughlugh was taught the doctrines of Islam.

Puzzled and .
" Puzzled, Tintin proceeds to the main room with the giant telescope.
Puzzled audiences requested Sui Generis ' old songs.
Puzzled as to why his father wouldn't have come Invincible meets with Allen and greets his healed brother Oliver.
Puzzled, Anthony investigates and finds that his valuable collection of enamels has been taken.
Puzzled, Ford asked what he meant.
His poem " The Puzzled Census-Taker " amused many and " Rhyme of the Rail " was possibly the most admired poem of the period about rail travel.
Many games share the same basic gameplay of Puzznic but have added extra features over the years :- Puzztrix on the web and on PC, Addled and Germinal on the iPhone, Puzzled on mobile phones.
He continued to try to break into the American market, but sold only one idea to a prime time network show: the third season Remington Steele episode " Puzzled Steele " gave story credit to Spooner, Clemens and scriptwriter Jeff Melvoin.
Puzzled, Ross notices a few drops of blood spilling from the mysterious man's suitcase.
" Puzzled People " undertaken in the 1940s suggested that only 4 percent of people in Britain believed in reincarnation.

by and gap
He reminds readers that " there is a gap between the narrator ’ s meaning and the text ’ s, and that a moral-political argument is being carried out by means of parody ".
The canines were somewhat elongated and were followed by a short gap in each jaw, and the cheek-teeth were adapted for succulent food.
Other chemicals, known as DNA intercalators, fit into the gap between adjacent bases on a single strand and induce frameshift mutations by " masquerading " as a base, causing the DNA replication machinery to skip or insert additional nucleotides at the intercalated site.
This means there is an energy gap for single-particle excitation, unlike in the normal metal ( where the state of an electron can be changed by adding an arbitrarily small amount of energy ).
: which is of the form suggested the previous year by M. J. Buckingham in Very High Frequency Absorption in Superconductors based on the fact that the superconducting phase transition is second order, that the superconducting phase has a mass gap and on Blevins, Gordy and Fairbank's experimental results the previous year on the absorption of millimeter waves by superconducting tin.
To support the centre, Captain Thompson of Leander abandoned the futile efforts to drag the stranded Culloden off the shoal and sailed down the embattled French line, entering the gap created by the drifting Peuple Souverain and opening a fierce raking fire on Franklin and Orient.
The gap, set by the distance between the nut and the end of the tube, regulates the influx of the air in a way similar to the open slots of the Bunsen burner.
Although Connecticut is a wealthy state by most measures, the income gap between its urban and suburban areas is striking, with several of Connecticut's cities ranking among the nation's poorest and most dangerous.
Some commentators have identified a growing gap between national and economic conservatism: " most parties of the Right are run by economic conservatives who, in varying degrees, have marginalized social, cultural, and national conservatives.
However, a 2005 study by H. Michael Crowson and colleagues suggested a moderate gap between RWA and other conservative positions.
Although the concept of consilience in Whewell's sense was widely discussed by philosophers of science, the term was unfamiliar to the broader public until the end of the 20th century, when it was revived in Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge, a 1998 book by the humanist biologist Edward Osborne Wilson, as an attempt to bridge the culture gap between the sciences and the humanities that was the subject of C. P. Snow's The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution ( 1959 ).
Naturalistic dualism comes from Australian Philosopher, David Chalmers ( born 1966 ) who argues there is an explanatory gap between objective and subjective experience that cannot be bridged by reductionism because consciousness is, at least, logically autonomous of the physical properties upon which it supervenes.
Door guards protect fingers in door hinges by covering the gap that is created by opening doors by covering the hinges of doors with a piece of rubber or plastic that wraps from the door frame to the door.
Both the playwright and his work were travestied by comic poets such as Aristophanes, the known dates of whose own plays thus serve as a terminus ad quem for those of Euripides, though sometimes the gap can be considerable ( e. g. twenty-seven years separate Telephus, known to have been produced in 438 BC, from its parody in Thesmophoriazusae in 411 BC!
In either case it is generally considered a " clumsy forgery " and an attempt to seek to fill the ' gap ' suggested by Colossians 4: 16.
Rancid News filled the gap left by these two zines for a short while.
Ramaprasad ( 1983 ) defines feedback generally as " information about the gap between the actual level and the reference level of a system parameter which is used to alter the gap in some way ", emphasising that the information by itself is not feedback unless translated into action.
At daylight, two British armoured brigades — 2nd Armoured Brigade and the fresh 23rd Armoured Brigade — would sweep through the gap created by the infantry.
The South Africans were to make and mark a gap in the minefields to the south-east of Miteirya by midnight of 26 / 27 July.
The 69th Infantry Brigade would pass through the minefield gap created by the South Africans to Deir el Dhib and clear and mark gaps in further minefields.

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