RMAAXJXD–structure built by hand of a balanced card house
RFEH9RPJ–Little boy building house of cards
RFAWTP2D–House of credit cards, close-up
RMBKY9JY–teenage boy building a house of cards from his money at his confirmation party
RF2PD2R51–White surface with 3D cigar box with playing cards, close-up view
RM2T83Y52–François Séraphin Delpech (Lithograph in) Village near the large cardhouse near Isère; View of a bridge near Vienne (isère). Lithography around 1818
RMREHECX–. Collected reprints / Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratories [and] Pacific Oceanographic Laboratories. Oceanography Periodicals.. FrcimE 2.—Cardhouse structure. Saltwater deposit. (Gold- scliniidt-Lambe 1953). Figure 3.—Cardhouse structure. Freshwater deposit. (Lambe 1953). Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratories; Pacific Oceanographic Laborator
RFEH9RPG–Little boy building house of cards
RFAWTP2E–House of credit cards, close-up
RMBKY9H8–teenage boy building a house of cards from his money at his confirmation party
RM2T7JBCY–Noël Cochin d.J. Kartäusermönch in front of his cardhouse, read at the table. Traces of black chalk, pen in brown; on the coast paper that was covered with multiple black border
RMREHEC8–. Collected reprints / Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratories [and] Pacific Oceanographic Laboratories. Oceanography Periodicals.. Figure 6.—Salt-flocculated cardhouse structure with a stair- step configuration. (Lambe 1958). Figure 7.—Nonsalt-flocculated well-developed cardhouse structure. (Lambe 1958). Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratories; P
RFEH9RPH–Boys building house of cards together
RM2T7JEPG–Joseph August Knip Ruin that serves as a cardhouse; On the way from Rome to Cora (2 high passages with round arches give the view of the landscape and sky, as a staffage two monks and women with a child). Cover -colored
RMREHECN–. Collected reprints / Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratories [and] Pacific Oceanographic Laboratories. Oceanography Periodicals.. Figure 3.—Cardhouse structure. Freshwater deposit. (Lambe 1953). Figure 4.—Remolded structure. (Lambe 1953) water remains dispersed and settles with a slower velocity than silt and forms a much greater degree of parallel par- ticle orientation (oriented fabric). Thus, according to Lambe (1953), particle orientation in a dispersed system is a parallel arrangement (oriented fabric), whereas in a flocculated system it is a random arrangement (cardhouse
RM2JMNF17–Liemann Ludwig Theodor, sketchbook of the Italian journey (without dat.): Bl. 25: Bologna. 2 sketches: Cardhouse (perspective view, floor plan). Pencil watercolored on paper, 60.5 x 44.3 cm (including scan edges)
RM2T7JBCC–Noël Cochin d.J. Reading hermit in front of his cardhouse. Feder in brown, traces of a reddish drawing, remnants of a border in black chalk, upset with multiple black bordering, covered with a multiple black border
RM2JMNF16–Liemann Ludwig Theodor, sketchbook of the Italian journey (without dat.): Bl. 26: Bologna. 3 sketches: Cardhouse (view), S. Maria de 'Servi (details equipment), house (floor plan). Pencil watercolored on paper, 60.1 x 44.3 cm (including scan edges)
RFEH9RPN–Boy building house of cards
RMREHEC1–. Collected reprints / Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratories [and] Pacific Oceanographic Laboratories. Oceanography Periodicals.. Figure 7.—Nonsalt-flocculated well-developed cardhouse structure. (Lambe 1958). cussing the relationships between fabric and the engineer- ing behavior of clay. Van Olphen (1963) depicted in a descriptive sense the difference in particle arrangement of sedimentation from a peptized versus a flocculated suspension (fig. 9a, 9b). The main intent was to show that flocculated particles form a loose, voluminous sediment in contrast to a relatively dense
RFEH9RPD–Little boy building house of cards
RMREHECC–. Collected reprints / Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratories [and] Pacific Oceanographic Laboratories. Oceanography Periodicals.. Richard H. Bennett, William R. Bryant, and George H. Keller. Figure 6.—Salt-flocculated cardhouse structure with a stair- step configuration. (Lambe 1958). Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratories; Pacific Oceanographi
RFEH9RPP–Boy building house of cards
RFCWNX8W–Colleagues building house of cards
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