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10 Sentences With "autochthonously"

How to use autochthonously in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "autochthonously" and check conjugation/comparative form for "autochthonously". Mastering all the usages of "autochthonously" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Historically, some of these mosquito-borne diseases have been autochthonously transmitted on Guam.
This finding indicates that the organism exists autochthonously around the coastal waters or aquatic habitats in Taiwan.
Aeromonas species are Gram-negative, rod-shaped, non-spore-forming, facultatively anaerobic bacteria that occur ubiquitously and autochthonously in aquatic environments.
This is expected to lead to an optimal immunotherapy protocol effective in transgenic mice suffering from spontaneously developing and autochthonously growing tumors which represent the most relevant model for human cancer.
Pottery vessels imported from southern Italy were found at Gracini near Brgulje. In Roman times, the local Liburnian population lived quite autochthonously. The existence of the Roman population is evidenced by the toponyms: Karstul, Bavkul, Maknare, Tramerka, Brgulje et al. Upon arrival, between the seventh and tenth centuries, Croats gradually assimilated the local population.
Nonetheless, contemporaries drew a distinction between cruentation and (to a modern observer) equally occult practices. Other forms of trial by ordeal vanished during centuries before cruentation's demise, precisely because they (hubristically) effected divine judgement. As the practice of anatomical dissection became more prevalent, medical professions became increasingly aware of circumstances in which dead bodies could autochthonously emit fluids. Cruentative procedures became increasingly stringent, and in 1545, Antonius Blancus was the first to question the reliability of cruentation as a practice.
The Vissarion Cult in Russia - Lermanet, November 6, 2003'Reborn' Jesus Leads Vegans in Russia - Newser, August 29, 2009 The aim of the group is to unite all religions on Earth. He replaced Christmas with a feast day on his birthday (14 January) and claimed to possess an ability to heal cancer and AIDS with a touch from his hand. Tiberkul, the settlement in the Taiga, was established in 1994 on a territory of , and expanded to several nearby villages, such as those of Petropavlovka and Cheremshanka, at ca. . It has some four thousand inhabitants, largely living autochthonously and following ecological principles.
Jung, Collected Works vol. 7 (1953), "The Structure of the Unconscious" (1916), ¶437–507 (pp. 263–292). In "The Significance of Constitution and Heredity in Psychology" (November 1929), Jung wrote: > And the essential thing, psychologically, is that in dreams, fantasies, and > other exceptional states of mind the most far-fetched mythological motifs > and symbols can appear autochthonously at any time, often, apparently, as > the result of particular influences, traditions, and excitations working on > the individual, but more often without any sign of them. These "primordial > images" or "archetypes," as I have called them, belong to the basic stock of > the unconscious psyche and cannot be explained as personal acquisitions.
What is most noteworthy about the Neolithic in this region is that it developed autochthonously from the Mesolithic there, through contact with the Chalcolithic cultures in the west and Neolithic hunter gatherer cultures in the East (Here Neolithic is defined as pottery-bearing, not agricultural). The people in this region relied predominantly on hunting aurochs, red deer, roe deer and boar, and fishing for roach, eels and pike. They made pottery from about 6200 BC. This type of pottery made by hunter-gatherers had arrived in the middle Volga from the Lake Baikal region of Asia. One notable characteristic is that many pots had pointed bottoms, designed for cooking over a fire.
In "The Significance of Constitution and Heredity in Psychology" (November 1929), Jung wrote: > And the essential thing, psychologically, is that in dreams, fantasies, and > other exceptional states of mind the most far-fetched mythological motifs > and symbols can appear autochthonously at any time, often, apparently, as > the result of particular influences, traditions, and excitations working on > the individual, but more often without any sign of them. These "primordial > images" or "archetypes," as I have called them, belong to the basic stock of > the unconscious psyche and cannot be explained as personal acquisitions. > Together they make up that psychic stratum which has been called the > collective unconscious. The existence of the collective unconscious means > that individual consciousness is anything but a tabula rasa and is not > immune to predetermining influences.

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