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"in situ" Definitions
  1. in the original or correct place

278 Sentences With "in situ"

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

Moto Z In Situ Photography Moto Z product photography Moto Z In Situ Photography Moto Z Force Droid Edition product photography Moto Z Force Droid Edition in situ photography Moto Z Force Droid Edition product photography Beleaguered smartphone maker Motorola is releasing two flagship handsets, the Moto Z and the more expensive Moto Z Force.
So it meant that, again, everything was happening in situ.
They could remain in situ, if the foundation permits it.
Whenever possible, JMKAC's goal is to keep an environment in situ.
Instead, they favor in-situ upgrading of facilities and secure tenancy.
The archaeologists have decided the decorated floor will remain in situ.
As the term "in situ" denotes, the cancer has not spread.
Will a major institution try to preserve in situ street art?
First, it allows for in-situ science within a cryovolcanic vent.
I am referring to being diagnoses with DCIS, Ductal Carcinoma in Situ.
The bill would prohibit developing under Artemis In-Situ Resource Utilization technology.
Mr Yeung, the beekeeper, says "hunters" felled and butchered it in situ.
I refused the bilateral mastectomy suggestions for lobular carcinoma in situ (L.C.I.S.).
But the most important words are 'in situ,' meaning 'inside the duct.
Some more monumental finds will be recomposed to be admired in situ.
Now researchers could leave their wires in situ for long stretches of time.
She was diagnosed with in situ melanoma, the lowest stage of skin cancer.
Basic sales staff and relationship managers are already in situ across the continent.
The works are being created in-situ in various outdoor locations across Khartoum.
Every model of planetary formation says these could not have formed in situ.
The tests confirmed that she has early-stage ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS).
That means some will leave in situ monuments to problematic individuals and causes.
Of course, falling for a local cat's charms, in situ, is one thing.
You could also write in SITU at 39A, if you know that one.
Recipes and dishes, shot in situ, are interspersed with stories from the everyday enthusiast.
Not long afterward, Hoebeke travelled to Pennsylvania to see the new species in situ.
I had noninvasive ductal carcinoma in situ, it turned out, and lots of it.
How can archeologists reconstruct sites in-situ where all the elements have gone missing?
"If you're going to study cheetahs, you should be studying them in situ," Roberts said.
In Situ, a full-service restaurant, is to open next month for lunch and dinner.
Even more strangely, it makes some kind of sense once you eat at In Situ.
"The museum and its board are working to ensure that the work remains in situ."
Circles on the map show the birthplaces of the 15 dishes In Situ is currently offering.
Since then, the group has worked hard to create a mechanism for inciting terror in situ.
But UN-Habitat, in its report, advised against forced resettlement and encouraged in-situ upgrades instead.
"Our goal is to do great in-situ science," he explained to Motherboard after the meeting.
But make no mistake, LASIK—or more formally, laser in situ keratomileusis—is a serious surgical procedure.
"In situ conservation may be the only feasible tool in the conservation toolbox for many such plants."
But authorities were "skeptical about in-situ incremental upgrading and prefer resettlement at this time", it added.
Entering the 1980s, more archival material documents the Casablanca group's in-situ reliefs, frescoes, and furniture designs.
Fugazzi exhibited his works from this period in a 2016 exhibition at Gross McCleaf called In Situ.
"It occupies that rare sweet spot," said Corey Lee, the chef at In Situ in San Francisco.
A second method, billed as greener by the Canadian government and oil interests, is "in-situ" extraction.
When: Tuesday, August 23, 7pm (RVSP Required) Where: Swiss In situ (102 Franklin Street, Tribeca, Manhattan) Artist Susan Cianciolo will lead a free fanzine workshop as part of the Nieves and Innen Zine Library exhibition at Swiss In Situ (the temporary name for the Swiss Institute's temporary space).
Pathology tests showed she also had extensive ductal carcinoma in situ, a less invasive form of the disease.
If you've been successful, as with this project, you leave a stronger place, people and organizations in situ.
Less authoritarian governments, such as Kenya's, have tried to "upgrade" slums in situ by building newer, better housing.
Its systems can make use of in situ resources like material mined from asteroids or recycled space debris.
Conservation efforts don't have to be only in situ or only ex situ, there's room for multiple tactics.
The Latin phrase "in situ" is used when a work of art is embedded in its original location.
Rhodes is behind EXPO CHICAGO's IN/SITU Outside program, which worked with Navy Pier to commission the piece.
Inside the Mars Rover will be a little MOXIE, or the Mars Oxygen In-Situ Resource Utilization Experiment.
For Mr. Alesch, the idea of experiencing the goods in situ is a counterbalance to today's online marketplace.
He was in the right place at the right time, for sure, and caught a subculture in situ.
The Mars 2020 rover will carry MOXIE on board, or the Mars Oxygen In-Situ Resource Utilization Experiment.
Topics will span the continuum from art environments remaining in situ to environment components no longer in place.
Dennis Oppenheim himself never saw the sculpture — which was entirely fabricated by South Korean individuals and companies — in situ.
Dickinson was diagnosed with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) on March 12, days after her doctor found a lump.
Shattered objects torn from their original setting cannot be reconstructed in situ, though they can be reinterpreted and relocated.
DoT researchers arrive at this figure by observing drivers' mobile-phone use in situ at randomly allocated stopping places.
The other 80% is ripe for the in situ method, which has a less visible footprint compared to mining.
Fraser's videos are juxtaposed with Louise Lawler's photographs of artworks in situ, which were seminal to 1980s appropriation art.
In situ extraction actually refers to any method that pulls up bitumen without digging up the earth around it.
Dahlia Biosciences: Leading the next generation of multiplexed in situ single-cell RNA analysis tools for research and diagnostic applications.
Buren's current sybaritic in situ art, with its stated goal of exposing institutionalization, is a central candidate for such exposure.
Specifically, "Package for Resource Observation and in-Situ Prospecting for Exploration, Commercial exploitation and Transportation," which is clearly a mouthful.
These would be scouting missions designed to test their landing technology as well as their in situ resource utilization capability.
"You need different approaches, with some in-situ development, some in-city relocation and some outside the city," he said.
"The ultimate hope for in-situ reconstruction is reconciliation," explains Brian Daniels, the University of Pennsylvania's Cultural Heritage Center director.
For travelers in situ — versus armchair travelers — listening can stimulate the imagination to make the leap from present to past.
The interplay of camera, dancers, architecture in the film, plus architecture in situ combine to trigger an outpouring of playful possibilities.
Bradford visited the cyclorama in situ only after his Pickett's Charge canvases had been shipped off from his Los Angeles studio.
While in situ, it will create new elements that can be added to the structure based on real-time sensed data.
However, until recently, gathering in situ data just above the surface in this part of a supercell has been nearly impossible.
An earlier version of this story misidentified the affiliation of the principal investigator of the Venus In Situ Composition Investigations proposal.
What AR really means is connecting digital information, objects and experiences with the physical world in situ as you experience them.
That's because the cancer within in situ is still in the outer layer of the skin, and is therefore easier to remove.
Two areas in Arizona are testing a method of mining copper without digging a hole, using a method called in situ leaching.
If they do, though, they are usually lethal if left in situ—but much harder to remove than when they were small.
As drone operators can often be occluded from view, it's not always easy to detect their whereabouts and reprimand them in situ.
Another hotspot was New York's P.P.O.W booth, where fairgoers clamored to grab $10-$50 works painted in situ by artist Steve Keene.
"Ultimately, we need to conserve existing wild coffee species in situ to ensure the preservation of remaining genetic diversity," the team concluded.
The Hugo casualties are scattered along the forest floor, their carcasses left in situ where they now nurture their own micro-ecosystems.
Today that process makes up about 50% of the Keystone XL pipeline's oil, while less-visible "in situ" pumping generates the rest.
Other components of the self-cleaning house included a closet where clothes could be hung and then cleaned and dried in situ.
A commission in Richmond, Virginia, recommended removing a statue of Confederate president Jefferson Davis, while leaving four other Confederate memorials in situ.
The object is accompanied by a collaged image of the structure in situ at the factory, and another visualizing its color patterns.
Despite being negative on the BRCA gene testing, the biopsy revealed pre cancerous cells [DCIS (Ductal Carcinoma in situ)] within my right breast.
"What AR really means is connecting digital information, objects and experiences with the physical world in situ as you experience them," Hanke wrote.
Because the cost of sending materials to other planetary bodies is so costly, any method of extracting materials in situ is highly preferred.
Some current examples include the mural at Craftsman and Wolves coffee shop, as well as the paintings at the MOMA's In Situ restaurant.
This $2.5 million competition aims to crowdsource innovative Martian habitat designs that rely on 3D-printed and in situ resources on the planet.
Critic's Notebook 10 Photos View Slide Show ' SAN FRANCISCO — By avoiding originality, In Situ is the most original new restaurant in the country.
At In Situ, the food loses all the context provided by time and place, which are reduced to words printed on the menu.
When making product updates at Thumbtack, I often met with our service professionals in-person to observe them using the product in-situ.
Earlier this week, Janice Dickinson told the Daily Mail that she's been diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer: ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS).
Indeed, anyone who has toyed around with the Kerbal Space Program is probably already familiar with the benefits of in situ orbital manufacturing.
"There won't be a single location – country teams will likely be based more in situ," another banking source familiar with contingency plans said.
In addition, there will be 63,410 cases this year of carcinoma in situ, abnormal cells that may be an early form of cancer.
In fact, eighty percent of the estimated bitumen reserves in Canada's oil-producing province of Alberta are only reachable with in situ methods.
When she heard about the government's new commitment to monitor in situ sites more closely, she was "glad to hear it," Korosi said.
In situ melanoma, also known as stage 0 melanoma, is the easiest form of the cancer to cure and has a 99% survival rate.
NASA has been exploring the concept, known as in-situ resource utilization (ISRU), for its outer-space missions — which brings us back to Caterpillar.
A prime example is "Demon with Bowl (Exhibition Enlargement)," an 18-meter resin figure built in situ at the heart of the Palazzo Grassi.
"The NIMPH system combines in situ resource utilization, miniaturization, [and] electric propulsion," said ExoTerra Resource President Michael VanWoerkom at the NIAC symposium in 2016.
For one thing, it's expensive to carry cargo into space, so agencies prioritize "in-situ resource utilization," a principle that advocates using found materials.
The second, called Venus In situ Composition Investigations, is aimed at improving an instrument needed to study rocks in the harsh conditions of Venus.
Since then, the preservation groups had been working to explore multiple strategies to preserve the building in situ, including finding a preservation-minded buyer.
Mourad (modern Moroccan) and In Situ (seasonal menu of global dishes; at SFMoma) are just two of the city's 46 one-star Michelin restaurants.
In his absence, and with Kavanaugh in situ, the court will likely roll back a number of progressive rulings, including those concerning abortion rights.
The Central Asian nation accomplished that feat in large part by exploiting a process called "in situ leaching" increasingly being used to extract uranium.
Many of the mosaics are still in situ; for example, the freestanding 1914 Swan Memorial in the Bronx's Woodlawn Cemetery that was recently restored.
They also looked at a sponge up close with a method called fluorescence in situ hybridization coupled with confocal laser scanning microscopy, or FISH-CLSM.
A diagnosis of ductal carcinoma in situ D.C.I.S. — abnormal cells in the milk duct, considered the earliest form of breast cancer (stage 0) and noninvasive.
In places, roach contains fragments of oyster shells; in others, the stone is pitted with screw-shaped holes, formed when other shells dissolved in situ.
He spoke of building a meteorite museum in town and creating a fenced-in park atop Sunset Mesa, where visitors could observe meteorites in situ.
More importantly, when they analysed the patched hearts in situ for health and function, they noted that the scaffolds were not impeding them at all.
The Heritage Council are trying to preserve the Sheelas as best they can, though the broad consensus is that they should be kept in situ.
If fighting for in situ species that Mr Thomas sees as doomed adds value to people's lives, it is hard to begrudge them that boon.
"This finding may lay a foundation for ultimate in situ repair of the heart by targeting endogenous cardiac fibroblasts with small molecules," the paper concludes.
I could find no comparable data on the impacts of in situ tar sands operations on the landscape to try and make a similar calculation.
Upon entry, a concrete spiraling staircase to the upper floor features the pattern of the wood mold that was used to create it in situ.
The company has built a desktop machine, called OLO, that analyzes cartridges manually loaded with drops of the patient's blood — performing blood counts in situ.
"In Situ," Ms. Chebli's dance, was a series of ideas connected only by her performing them and their sense of restricted space and constricted physicality.
Whereas ecstasy typically floats the techno boat, here cold champagne is the inspiration for 20 multi-generational, international artists to create new work in situ.
Many technology companies thought A.R. might first take off through specialized business applications that, for example, allow architects to visualize finished building projects in situ.
That's partly because Owens consciously keeps the pieces out of most of his stores; and partly because, even in situ, it doesn't look like furniture.
The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art has taken things a step further with In Situ, a restaurant that opened in its lobby in June.
The Fukushima disaster has only aggrandized this signature, provoking an era in which artists of all nations are driven to engage with nuclear events, in situ.
" So, when she was diagnosed with DCIS, or ductal carcinoma in situ breast cancer, in December 2012 at the age of 503, McNaney was "absolutely devastated.
The garments, cigarette packs, bibles, bottles, and toiletries Misrach has shot in-situ are covered in dirt, photographed in isolation like evidence at a crime scene.
By the 2020s, NASA expects to "study landing and in-situ resource utilization" on Mars and "conduct a round-trip robotic sample return mission," Schierholz said.
The other recovery method, in situ, involves pumping superhot pressurized steam underground to melt out the bitumen so it can be sucked up to the surface.
Instead, the aim is to restore and preserve the environment in situ, including stabilizing the outdoor sculptures, and getting local zoning changes for an artist residency.
Some of the in-situ and off-site development will be done by private firms and charities such as Habitat and the Philipines-based Gawad Kalinga.
In situ extraction still impacts wildlife, such as caribou herds, and it takes more energy — and generates more greenhouse gases — to extract oil compared to mining.
Finally, they're ready to build a scale replica in WET's back lot, complete with a detailed scenic backdrop, to see how it will look in situ.
More conspicuous was Anton Kern's installation of large, square banners by Lara Schnitger, which hangs over an expansive seating area as part of the IN/SITU program.
Cameco is also restraining its United States in situ uranium production, which involves removing ore by injecting a solution into wells while leaving the rock in place.
The museum plans to maintain the map as part of its holdings and (I hear) is readying a future release with murals and art objects in situ.
Scientists can see very complex structures as they occur in situ, and image them—capturing entire bodies, nervous systems and organs, mapping nerve connections and vascular systems.
Academics at the University of Nantes who led the project said it was the first house built in situ for human habitation using a robot 3D-printer.
Campaigners said where possible the state should opt for in situ, or on location development rather than relocation which costs up to 20 times more than redevelopment.
Their interests – clearing the ground for building and then maximising profit – are rather at odds with those of the club, who generally wish to remain in situ.
Gardega installed what he calls Pissing Pug in situ on Monday morning, where it remained for a few hours until the artist decided himself to remove it.
An entire chapter in Decommunized features on mosaics that are no longer in situ, from ones depicting the hammer and sickle to many portraits of Vladimir Lenin.
The project, "DeLIMITations," is represented at Rick Wester Fine Art by photographs of the markers in situ, sculptures of them, imitation road signs and a map triptych.
Photographs were also taken of each original casting in situ so they could be consulted on site later by installers with iPads reassembling the colossal jigsaw puzzle.
It transports visitors to Mr. Chareau's translucent Maison de Verre in Paris: Pop on the goggles, and the furniture before you in the gallery reappears in situ.
The house, whose patent consisted of 20063 individual inventions, also included a cupboard in which dirty dishes, set on mesh shelves, were washed and dried in situ.
An additional 63,000 women will be diagnosed with ductal carcinoma in situ, also known as DCIS, which has some, but not all, of the typical traits of cancer.
The MIDAS project involves scientists from several research institutions studying the ice shelf via satellite measurements and in-situ observations taken on top of the ice shelf itself.
Two technicians measuring a large in situ shoulder bone of Lingwulong shenqi, a newly discovered dinosaur unearthed in northwestern China, appears in this image provided July 24, 2018.
In Situ makes a good case that restaurant food can be highly expressive of an individual chef's sensibility and of the sensibility of a particular place and time.
But when it comes to ocean temperatures, we don't have a ton of in situ research that shows the consequences of an ever-so-slightly more tepid sea.
If we developed a satellite assembly construction in situ manufacturing servicing capability in this orbit, then we could launch vehicles in pieces, and assemble them in that orbit.
The following weeks gave me a diagnosis with a 98 percent survival rate: ductal carcinoma in situ, a condition that is not even considered a cancer by some.
In situ, she is half of a damned couple menaced by three nasty, hairy thugs, in the vicinity of hanging corpses (including that of Judas) and other atrocities.
The one next to it, which Mr. Fitzmaurice did not flag, was in fact a squamous cell carcinoma in situ, Dr. Leavitt said in a follow-up email.
And rather than transporting surviving neutrons to an external detector, they employed an in situ detector that dips into the magnetic bottle and quickly absorbs all the neutrons inside.
"These were the remains of a limping individual — he too was likely impeded in his escape by motor difficulties, and left exposed at the time in situ," he explained.
In this tote was some material she had forgotten about: unpaid bills, bail receipts, letters from prison and a few extant fragments of hastily scrawled in situ field notes.
French duo Martin Chaput and Martial Chazallon, of Projet In Situ, present La Ronde, an immersive sensory audio tour that leads festival-goers to the Amory's most evocative spaces.
The Portz family is one of the last households still in situ; they live among piles of rubble after neighboring families were resettled 2250 k west at New Immerath.
"It certainly didn't sound like [leaving the murals in situ] was their first plan, but it doesn't mean that it won't be their second or third plan," she added.
It's heartening that NASA, ESA, and Roscosmos all have missions to Venus in the works—the Venus In Situ Explorer (VISE), the Venus Entry Probe, and Venera-D, respectively.
Rather, pictures of crops can be snapped in situ in the field, with measurements and assessments still — they claim — accurately extracted by algorithms which intelligently filter out background noise.
The best part of the show is an installation that was done in situ, featuring a presumably finished canvas mounted on a free-standing wall sprayed with rectilinear forms.
No matter what you bring, it's best to garnish your offering in situ, especially those grain or potato salads, which can get a little dull sitting in the fridge.
That's not enough to have a toxic effect, Korosi said, but a greater reliance on in situ mining in the oil sands could push contaminant levels over the top.
The researchers conclude that if in situ mining is really the future of the Albertan oil sands, then its effects need to become a research priority, alongside better monitoring.
Musk did say that SpaceX will design the ISRU (in-situ-resource utilization) system designed to collect materials for propellant on Mars and that the design is pretty far along.
Buren's own legacy, perhaps best seen in Felice Varini's work, seems to be in situ art conceived specifically for a space (a context) that is provided by the host venue.
Developing in situ satellite service capabilities is also a big part of that picture, so this is a promising step both for LEO and for more ambitious exploration missions beyond.
Wafting out of artist Simone Leigh's in-situ apothecary, a heady mix of chamomile, lavender, hibiscus and other natural remedies sets the tone for The Waiting Room, her new residency.
The burger, which Mr. Myint developed for the menu at In Situ, a restaurant inside the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, looks unfamiliar at first, and out of proportion.
Lesser does readers a service by interspersing her narrative with "In Situ" chapters that serve as guides to his designs and vividly conjure the experience of walking through his buildings.
While organizations like the Black Sea Maritime Archaeology Project are investing in costly dive missions to view wrecks in situ, Aydin has fragments of history washing up at his feet.
Over the years, Evrard said CERN had a "not-so-good habit" of simply leaving old cables in situ when they were replaced, and piling the new ones up top.
When Fogtt and Biskupska bought the old sanatorium in 2008, they set up a nonprofit initiative called the In Situ Contemporary Art Foundation to raise funds for renovation and programming.
According to the study, a version of which was published last week in Environmental Pollution, pollutants have increased by 140 percent in the sampled area since in situ operations began.
Now NASA is trying to change that with a craft called the Long-Lived In-situ Solar System Explorer—a probe designed to withstand the planet's harsh conditions for 60 days.
Genome editing, as this approach is known, tweaks existing DNA in situ by adding, subtracting or substituting a piece that may be as small as a single genetic "letter" (or nucleotide).
Curbs on dollar purchasing for individuals now stand at $200 per month, down from $10,000 a month, and will be in place until December when the new government is in situ.
Although leaving it in situ would allow the public to view it as Cyprus's ancient civilians once did, water and other elements would damage the mosaic, communications minister Marios Demetriades said.
It's the in-situ aspect – the desert that fills all your senses with the heat and arid sands of the nearby Sahara – that the Luxor [hotel] just can't get quite right.
In situ mining sites don't create the same massive (and highly visible) ecological disruption as open-pit mining, so they're often touted as being better for the environment than the alternative.
Brazilian beef packers had hoped the online audits of the plants - which do not require the presence of inspectors in situ and are organized remotely - would take place in July, she said.
For example, the rover will carry an instrument called MOXIE (short for Mars Oxygen In-situ resource utilization Experiment) that will  produce oxygen from carbon dioxide  in the Red Planet&aposs air.
About 20 percent of all new breast cancer cases are ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), a cluster of abnormal cells that has not invaded nearby tissues, and is rarely, if ever, fatal.
"There are a number of challenges in studying the biology of the human placenta in its natural form or in situ because of ethical reasons as well as accessibility," Du told me.
"Not only is it surviving these large waves, but it is making detailed recordings of extreme sea states in the Southern Ocean, a region rarely observed by in-situ instrument," he said.
The group said they would also support a range of alternatives "including remaining in situ, or if required, supporting modifications to the T1s to facilitate a transfer of ownership to a buyer".
"It is a common practice for looters to remove just the head of a sculpture in situ because it is easier to smuggle and sell on the black market," the statement said.
Hannah Denton, a counselling psychologist based in Brighton, overcame practical difficulties by attaching a sound recorder to a tow float, so that she could interview half a dozen devoted practitioners in situ.
I recently learned I had ductal carcinoma in situ, or D.C.I.S., a hotly contested condition that some doctors consider an early breast cancer and others say is not really cancer at all.
"The Cambodians in Phnom Penh now have clear evidence that it was definitely stolen from Prasat Chen at Koh Ker as the feet are still in situ," she emailed a Sotheby's officer.
In the new study, Canadian scientists looked at pollution levels in a body of water located two kilometres away from the Primrose in situ mining site, which is near Cold Lake, Alberta.
This table lamp at first struck me as maybe a bit too modern in photos, but in situ it looks great and is easily now a favorite item among my overall home decor.
Rothschild's devoted illustrations to Nimrud are especially stirring when one considers that the world recently lost the original reliefs left in situ, destroyed when ISIS fighters barrel-bombed the ancient city last March.
When the 43-year-old CBS morning anchor went in for a routine checkup with her dermatologist the week before Thanksgiving, she wasn't expecting to find out that she had melanoma in situ.
So they say -- Steele says to Ohr, just want to check with you that you&aposre OK. Still in situ and able to locally -- help locally as discussed, along with your bureau colleagues.
Traveling to exotic locations to capture the sights in plein air compositions is nothing new, but an intrepid British artist is blazing a new trail of in-situ artworks with her sewing machine.
"Upgrading slums and settlements in-situ with better facilities is a far better way to house the poor - and it is what they want too," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation on Friday.
"As much as possible, we must try to adapt and mitigate in situ because that's where people have their homes, land and livelihoods," said Harjeet Singh, global climate change lead at charity ActionAid.
During the study, 269,274 women, or about 280%, were diagnosed with invasive breast cancer and 290,23 women, less than 22%, were diagnosed with pre-invasive malignancies known as ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS).
Letter To the Editor: Re "My Brief Trip to Cancerland," by Jennifer Weiner (Sunday Review, May 13): At 40, I received a diagnosis of ductal carcinoma in situ, or stage 0 breast cancer.
What they did: For the study, researchers in Hawaii and Australia examined how corals reproduce, or spawn, from one year to the next, by taking in situ measurements out on the Great Barrier Reef.
That's why with the ESA-Russia Rosalind Franklin (ExoMars) rover we'll be drilling up to 210m underneath the harsh Martian surface to search for signs of past, or less likely present, life in-situ.
And it is quite possible to have oxygen at extreme altitude even if there is none lower down; you just have to generate it in situ, rather than have it waft up from below.
In a recent Styles column, Jenny, a writer, editor and communications consultant in the Pacific Northwest, shared the story of her diagnosis with ductal carcinoma in situ, or D.C.I.S., and the emotions that followed.
More likely is that it was already sitting in situ in off-market storage or was gradually accumulated before being placed on warrant, at which stage it "shows up" in the LME's stock reports.
While about 80 percent of breast cancer are diagnosed in the invasive state, about 20 percent are non-invasive, just confined to the ducts of the mammary glands, so-called ductal carcinoma in situ.
In situ mining produced just over half of all the bitumen recovered in Alberta in 2014, and the Alberta Energy Regulator expects the method to account for 60 percent of bitumen production by 2024.
This year's edition of the festival takes a more confrontational approach with the series "Counter-positions" where artworks respond in-situ to public monuments in Graz that are patriotic or glorify an erstwhile nationalist history.
These features drew the attention of Total Exploration & Production's R&D teams, who are working on finding an optimally reliable method to monitor, in real time and in situ, the environment around the company's facilities.
Known as the Long-Lived In-situ Solar System Explorer, or LLISSE, each of the probe's components is specially engineered to withstand the high temperature, high pressure, and reactive atmosphere that define that infernal planet.
"None of Venus Express' instruments were actually designed to make such in-situ atmosphere observations," Ingo Müller-Wodarg, lead author on a recent Nature Physics paper describing the space probe's findings, said in a statement.
He is proposing building the most powerful rocket of all time, the first long-duration interplanetary crewed spacecraft, and the infrastructure to mine in situ resources from the Martian surface within a decade and change.
Now, she'll source marble columns from eBay, crochet around aged wooden staffs, and arrange her assemblages with such exactitude that she can re-stage stretched mixed-media wall sculptures as if they were in situ.
Our polymathic morgue custodian, Jeff Roth, who presides over tens of thousands of drawers of old photographs and yellowed, crumbling clippings, all the stock-in-trade of the obituary writer's work, was interviewed in situ.
My surgeon read my films, examined me, sat down in her office with me and my husband and told us that the thing that I have, L.C.I.S., lobular carcinoma in situ, is not cancer, exactly.
Longer term, ICMM said that in situ mining - in which an acid is pumped underground to leach out copper and other minerals - could become the industry standard, thus eliminating the need for tailings dams entirely.
It is notable, however, that none of the works have fallen into private collections, and the vast majority remain in the area, upholding the legacy of the Corcoran in DC in spirit, if not in situ.
Pottery Barn's 3D Room View app lets you put new furniture items in your home, while companies like Wayfair, IKEA and Houzz also have augmented reality solutions to allow customers to try out furniture in situ.
How they play out could affect key issues, including how long Fed chair Janet Yellen be in situ and whether the Fed's policy path be revised, to either a slower or faster pace of rate hikes.
On the White Album box set it can be heard in situ as the lead in to "Don't Pass Me By." The effect is, as Martin feared, bizarre, though comical in a tongue-in-cheek way.
"To our knowledge, our data provide the earliest direct evidence of in situ beer production in China, showing that an advanced beer-brewing technique was established around 5,000 years ago," researchers said in a press release.
Ms. Lazo spent three months living in the jungle, studying the works in situ in a temple at the archaeological site Bonampak, before painting her reproductions at the new National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City.
Bortolami is celebrating its relocation to eastern TriBeCa from Chelsea with Daniel Buren's "To Align: works in situ 19363," a festive, optically rich threesome of site-specific installations by arguably the art world's most Duchampian painter.
Covering the interior walls of Guild Chapel in Stratford-upon-Avon, renowned as Shakespeare's birthplace, the works represent what is likely one of the only extant examples of a nearly complete, medieval decorative scheme still in situ.
The film's premise, shrinking a submarine and her crew of doctors to the point where they can travel through a patient's bloodstream to repair damage in situ, though entertaining, remains as absurd as it was in 1966.
Raphael didn't live long enough to see the tapestries in situ, but for one week last month, the Vatican exhibited all ten tapestries in the Sistine Chapel, as part of the Vatican Museums' homage to the artist.
The show marks the first Los Angeles foray for New York-based artists Jessi Reaves and Sophie Stone, who both manufactured their artwork in situ — mostly in the unit's designated parking space — as part of their residency.
Lydia Ourahmane's sound installation "Second Soufflé" (Second Breath, 22002) doubles down on this: it was recorded in-situ at the boxing school by zooming in on the breath of the young boxers during their warm-up routine.
There are organizations saying that the word "carcinoma" shouldn't be part of lobular carcinoma in situ — and that women should be told they have a growth or a neoplasm, an elevated risk or a precancerous condition instead.
Before any Confederate monuments are removed, they should be carefully photographed and measured so that the historical record of the monuments in situ can be preserved and made available for historians and art historians in the future.
They then copied the procedure for human mitochondrial transplants by removing fertilised nuclei from eggs of one strain, leaving behind that strain's mitochondria, and transplanting them into enucleated eggs of the second strain, whose mitochondria remained in situ.
"I think about the resources that were taken away from them, the chances that they could have achieved something better, all the people who were turned away for people who could just pay their way in," Situ said.
The eclecticism on display should come as no surprise to anyone familiar with Chartow's work; on Discogs, her last release In Situ is amusingly categorized in the "Breaks, Bassline, Beatdown, Trip Hop, Rhythmic Noise, Techno, Leftfield, Experimental" sections.
Protests erupt This Bumiputera-first approach has grated on those unable to avail themselves to its benefits, and sometimes led to public and painful displays of dissatisfaction against the ruling Barisan Nasional government, in situ since independence in 21990.
In Situ probably requires a steady supply of customers who care about restaurants in Lima and Copenhagen enough to have seen some of these dishes in cookbooks or at least in the Instagram accounts of the chefs in question.
One thing In Situ proves, just by existing, is that certain chefs are now cultural figures in a sense that once applied only to practitioners of what used to be called high culture: literature, concert music, avant-garde painting.
The proposal would regulate a mining method called in-situ recovery, which involves injecting a solution into aquifers containing uranium and bringing that solution to the surface for processing — a method criticized by environmentalists as posing wider contamination risks.
The petroleum industry is also working to limit surface mining and increase its share of "in situ" production of oil, which drills wells into hard-to-reach deposits, blasts them with steam, and pumps oil products to the surface.
Hiring too junior or too senior early on is an issue but equally the multiple time zones and predominant email contact makes it harder for US-based management to realize a hiring issue or correct poor habits in situ.
That was when it opened the refurbished Building 20053 with a 25-year exhibition of 105 in-situ wall drawings by Sol LeWitt, an influential Minimalist-Conceptualist who doesn't figure as prominently in the Dia power grid as others.
Current in situ bitumen supply is estimated at between 22.5 to 23 million bpd; non-upgraded bitumen supply is expected to rise by 26,000 bpd in 2016 and by another 110,000 bpd in 2017, RBC Capital Markets said earlier this year.
Y. lipolytica thrives on nitrogen, which can be mined from urea, a compound found in urine, and carbon, which could be harvested from the carbon dioxide gas exhaled by astronauts, or from other in situ sources such as the Martian atmosphere.
You are in situ, absorbing the lingo, customs, charms and quirks of the host culture; much more so than being embedded in this alien environment as a diplomat, foreign correspondent or sexpat businessman with an inappropriately aged Thai wife called Superporn.
A project of Corey Lee, who earned three Michelin stars cooking at Benu in San Francisco, In Situ will feature a changing menu of dishes from recipes contributed by René Redzepi, Alice Waters, Andoni Luis Aduriz and other famous chefs.
This doesn't make for a kindler, gentler experience in terms of taking the family to enjoy a lovely weekend outing to the site, and this is an important reason why saving and preserving this work in situ will be tough.
The four artists who make up the collective, Wolfgang Gantner, Ali Janka, Florian Reither and Tobias Urban, spent two weeks building up the sculptures in situ in the large contemporary galleries at the Boijmans before the opening on May 19.
Although most of the building's original fabric had been lost over the decades, the Municipal Art Society maintained that the structure should have been restored in situ using as much of the original material — or surviving vintage replacement material — as possible.
The AI system was better at identifying "invasive" cancers that had expanded into general breast tissue, while radiologists were equally good at seeing invasive cancers and cancers "in situ," meaning a cancer that remained within the milk duct where it originated.
"Those are countries where their environmental institutions are very weak, their legislation is non-existent, so if you're competing with in situ leaching in essentially low-governance areas of the world it's going to be really, really hard," he said.
Canada's oil sands are notoriously dirty, but in situ extraction—which involves blasting high-pressure steam into the ground to warm and soften bitumen, and then pumping it up to the surface—has been pitched as their environmentally friendlier future.
In the wake of a new report suggesting that the long-term effects of this extraction method could be damaging, the Alberta government has committed to stepping up its environmental monitoring of in situ oilsands, according to the Canadian Press.
The Public Art Fund confirmed with Hyperallergic that only two of these are still in situ: one on the east side of Union Square along the benches, another on the steps of the new Whitney Museum of American Art in Chelsea.
Some of the world's top researchers in lunar ISRU — in situ, or on site, resource utilization — outlined what the Moon has to offer in the way of markets and products, at a workshop at the Universities Space Research Association headquarters this week.
This legislation, signed by President Obama in late 2015, attempts to outline the rights of U.S. operators with respect to "asteroid resources," defined as any "abiotic resource in situ in outer space" located "on or within a single asteroid," including minerals or water.
Because of their nomadic nature and vast territories, studying cheetahs in situ has always been a difficult task, and a large portion of what we now know about the species—their health, fertility, endocrinology, genetics—came from research done on captive cats.
The Cassini mission comes to an end later this year, but proposed mission concepts already exist for a type of "Titan airplane" called the AVIATR (Aerial Vehicle for In-situ and Airborne Titan Reconnaissance) and a submarine that would explore Titan's seas.
Though most researchers think it evolved in situ from non-living chemicals, a few favour the idea that this evolution happened elsewhere and that living things, in the form of bacteria, were carried to Earth fully formed, inside objects of this sort.
"This is a complex program, with hundreds of experts around the country working on different elements of the project ... we have reached this stage with many major components restored and ready to go back in situ," said Senior Project Leader Charlotte Claughton.
The most ambitious experiment in this vein may be In Situ, the restaurant inside the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art that on any given day faithfully reproduces a dozen or so dishes that are strongly identified with other restaurants around the world.
Women with ductal carcinoma in situ who live in rural areas are 29 percent less likely to receive radiotherapy after breast-conserving surgery — a standard protocol known to reduce the risk of recurrence — compared with women who live in urban areas. 5.
Diana's hippie-Wiccan aunts, touchingly played by Kingston and Valarie Pettiford, live in one of the tale's more charming inventions: a funky, sentient house that rattles the crockery when it's irritated and supplies flashbacks by conjuring up life-size holographic scenes in situ.
There are more than 100 of them all over Ireland, many in situ on medieval castles, churches, and holy wells, though about a dozen are in museums, some of which have been hidden away in basements for years, rather than on display.
It's been live for eight months now, and Waymo is getting a ton of feedback on UX, using feedback forms distributed after every ride, polls sent out to program participants and eve ride-alongs with members of the team to gather live feedback in situ.
Speaking in London on Thursday, Lloyd's of London's chief executive said only 10 to 20 of its staff would be based in Brussels after it was allowed to delegate activity back to London and keep a lot of its underwriters and brokers in situ.
NASA's Cassini spacecraft mission to Saturn comes to an end later this year, but proposed mission concepts already exist for a type of "Titan airplane" called the AVIATR (Aerial Vehicle for In-situ and Airborne Titan Reconnaissance) and a submarine that would explore Titan's seas.
In situ, the 46-year-old screenwriter — known for sometimes-dark comedies like "Chuck & Buck" (2000), "School of Rock" (2003) and the new "Beatriz at Dinner," with Salma Hayek as a Los Angeles holistic healer — is a far cry from his dreamily lucid personas.
How you preserve the guiding spirit of the house without the individual who defined it for so many years is the struggle for any brand that has lost its champion while still in situ (not after the designer decided to step down, or sell up).
That process, moreover, is capable of regulation by using some sort of throttle to slow the cylinder's feed-in speed, permitting control of the amount of thrust developed in a way not possible for a normal solid-fuelled rocket, in which the fuel burns in situ.
Tipu's Tiger, a symbol of the East India Company's ruthless looting (or, in their words, "collecting"), makes visible the company's struggle between private and public interests, between commercial and governmental financing, and between the radically different forms of colonial encounter happening in situ and back in Britain.
On February 9, Rockburne will meet with developers Joseph and Jonathan Chetrit (respectively, father and son) as well as the building's new architect, Robert A. M. Stern, to discuss how to either preserve the fresco-secco works in situ or move them to an interested museum.
While the serological test can't detect COVID-19 during the incubation period, it is reliable once symptoms begin to present, and could help greatly with in-situ diagnostic efforts for patients already presenting with known indicators — freeing up PCR tests for broader use, including asymptomatic screening.

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