Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sedimentation> ?p ?o }
- Sedimentation abstract "Sedimentation is the tendency for particles in suspension to settle out of the fluid in which they are entrained, and come to rest against a barrier. This is due to their motion through the fluid in response to the forces acting on them: these forces can be due to gravity, centrifugal acceleration or electromagnetism. In geology sedimentation is often used as the polar opposite of erosion, i.e., the terminal end of sediment transport. In that sense it includes the termination of transport by saltation or true bedload transport. Settling is the falling of suspended particles through the liquid, whereas sedimentation is the termination of the settling process.Sedimentation may pertain to objects of various sizes, ranging from large rocks in flowing water to suspensions of dust and pollen particles to cellular suspensions to solutions of single molecules such as proteins and peptides. Even small molecules supply a sufficiently strong force to produce significant sedimentation.The term is typically used in geology, to describe the deposition of sediment which results in the formation of sedimentary rock, and in various chemical and environmental fields to describe the motions of often-smaller particles and molecules. Process is also used in biotech industry to separate out cells from the culture media.".
- Sedimentation thumbnail Siltation_or_Sedimentation.jpg?width=300.
- Sedimentation wikiPageID "938894".
- Sedimentation wikiPageLength "7008".
- Sedimentation wikiPageOutDegree "48".
- Sedimentation wikiPageRevisionID "683664304".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Bed_load.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Bedload.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Buoyancy.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Buoyant_mass.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Category:Earth_sciences.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Category:Laboratory_techniques.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Category:Liquid-solid_separation.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Cell_(biology).
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Centrifugal_acceleration.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Centrifugal_force.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Circular_sector.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Climate_change.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Coagulation_(disambiguation).
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Deposition_(geology).
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Depositional_record.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Diffusion.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Electromagnetism.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Exner_equation.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Flocculation.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Geologic_record.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Geology.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Gravitation.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Gravity.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Lamm_equation.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Landform.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Macromolecule.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Mason–Weaver_equation.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Molecule.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Particle_(ecology).
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Peptide.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Protein.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Reynolds_number.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Saltation_(geology).
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Sediment.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Sediment_transport.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Sedimentary_rock.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Sedimentation_coefficient.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Sedimentation_equilibrium.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Settling.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Siltation.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Solution.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Stokes_flow.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Suspension_(chemistry).
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Terminal_velocity.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink Ultracentrifuge.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLink File:Siltation_or_Sedimentation.jpg.
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "Sedimentary".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "Sedimentation".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "Sediments".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "beds".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "build up".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "deposited as sediment".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "deposited".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "deposition".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "migration".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "resedimentation".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "resedimented".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "re–sedimented".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "sediment packages".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "sediment".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "sedimentary processes".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "sedimentary".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "sedimentation principle".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "sedimentation".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "sedimented".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "sedimenting".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "sediments".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "settle".
- Sedimentation wikiPageWikiLinkText "silt".
- Sedimentation hasPhotoCollection Sedimentation.
- Sedimentation wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:About.
- Sedimentation wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Sedimentation wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Geologic_Principles.
- Sedimentation wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Sedimentation subject Category:Earth_sciences.
- Sedimentation subject Category:Laboratory_techniques.
- Sedimentation subject Category:Liquid-solid_separation.
- Sedimentation hypernym Tendency.
- Sedimentation type Article.
- Sedimentation type Organisation.
- Sedimentation type Article.
- Sedimentation type Laboratory.
- Sedimentation type Process.
- Sedimentation type Science.
- Sedimentation type Technique.
- Sedimentation type Thing.
- Sedimentation comment "Sedimentation is the tendency for particles in suspension to settle out of the fluid in which they are entrained, and come to rest against a barrier. This is due to their motion through the fluid in response to the forces acting on them: these forces can be due to gravity, centrifugal acceleration or electromagnetism. In geology sedimentation is often used as the polar opposite of erosion, i.e., the terminal end of sediment transport.".
- Sedimentation label "Sedimentation".
- Sedimentation sameAs ترسيب_(جيولوجيا).
- Sedimentation sameAs Седыментацыя.
- Sedimentation sameAs Sedimentació.
- Sedimentation sameAs Sedimentering.
- Sedimentation sameAs Sedimentation.
- Sedimentation sameAs Sedimentado.