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Accretion Defined

The imperceptible and gradual addition to land by the slow action of water. Heavy rain, river or ocean action would have this effect by either washing up sand or soil or by a permanent retreat of the high water mark. The washing up of soil is often called avulsion although the latter term is but a variety of accretion.

This definition is in context to Canadian Law. See more contextual defintions for Accretion.


We all pay a big price for bad shoreline policy

Published June 30, 2009, 9:00 pm, Island Packet

Beachfront development policy ultimately comes down to this: We can pay now or we can pay much, much

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BioSyntech announces year end and fourth quarter fiscal 2009 financial results and management changes

Published June 29, 2009, 5:56 am, CNW Group via Yahoo! Finance

BioSyntech, Inc. , a biotechnology company developing biotherapeutic thermogels for regenerative medicine, today announced its financial and operational results for the fiscal year, ending March 31, 2009.

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Enterprise and TEPPCO Agree to Merge Forming Largest Publicly Traded Energy Partnership

Published June 29, 2009, 4:00 am, Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance

HOUSTON----Enterprise Products Partners L.P. , TEPPCO Partners, L.P. and Enterprise GP Holdings L.P. today announced that Enterprise and TEPPCO have entered into definitive agreements to merge Enterprise and TEPPCO to form the largest publicly traded energy partnership with an enterprise value of more than $26 billion.

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Sea wall: Soft "˜way to go"™

Published June 28, 2009, 2:29 am, The Maui News

KIHEI - On Halama Street, a sea wall has been removed. Nothing too unusual there. Nature removes them from time to time. But this time, people did it, and - for what could be the first time in Hawaii - they didn't replace it with another sea wall.

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  • Damn Interesting » Lake Peigneur: The Swirling Vortex of Doom: Never drill a hole in a lake above a mine.
  • Black Hole Bipolar Jets: A fluid falling onto a small object usually cannot fall directly onto it --- most of the matter will miss the object initially, rotate around it, and only gradually be able to hit the central object. Think of draining your bathtub: Accretion disks are the celestial equivalent of this phenomenon, and can be found around black holes, neutron stars, white dwarfs, or around ordinary stars (planets are believed to form from an accretion disk around a protostar). Accretion disks around a variety of objects seem to be able to produce jets (protostars certainly do, in addition to accreting black holes). It is just that the ones from an accreting black hole tend to be the fastest and the most spectacular. A general rule of thumb is that the speed of a jet is about the same as the escape velocity of the central object --- so the jets from accreting black holes are at near the speed of light, while protostar jets are much more leisurely.

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  • Planetary accretion in the inner Solar System: Unlike gas-giant planets, we lack examples of terrestrial planets orbiting other Sun-like stars to help us understand how they formed. We can draw hints from elsewhere though. Astronomical observations of young stars; the chemical and isotopic compositions of Earth, Mars and meteorites; and the structure of the Solar System all provide clues to how the inner rocky planets formed. These data have inspired and helped to refine a widely accepted model for terrestrial planet formation?the planetesimal hypothesis. In this model, the young Sun is surrounded by a disk of gas and fine dust grains. Grains stick together to form mountain-size bodies called planetesimals. Collisions and gravitational interactions between planetesimals combine to produce a few tens of Moon-to-Mars-s ize planetary embryos in roughly 0.1?1 million years. Finally, the embryos collide to form the planets in 10?100 million years.

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