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"marshland" Definitions
  1. an area of soft, wet land

109 Sentences With "marshland"

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

Age: Brown, 21; Dean, 22; Marshland, 22Industry: ScienceKnown for: Brown, Dean, and Marshland are three of the cofounders of WindBorne Systems, a company that builds weather balloons.
Age: Brown, 21; Dean, 22; Marshland, 22Industry: ScienceKnown for: Brown, Dean, and Marshland are three of the cofounders of Windborn Systems, a company which builds weather balloons that are more durable than regular balloons.
He is passionate about protecting the marshland he once helped contaminate.
Some were jumping from boulders; others were dragging logs through marshland.
Judge John Hodgman Alex writes: My parents' yard abuts a protected marshland.
Now, groundhogs and geese roam freely, weaving between marshland brush and empty streets.
Sometimes it got spread over nearby marshland or dumped in the Calumet River.
She goes missing after a marshland tryst with Andy (Ty Olwin) ends badly.
Or is it an ordinary California suburb reborn as a mythic, jewel-colored marshland?
Poem Even under the best of circumstances, parenting can feel like navigating a marshland.
Mooring lines snapped, capsizing boats and sending others adrift to run aground on marshland.
It was modern and dun-colored and parked on 400 acres of salt marshland.
Over time, their precious lake got shallower and boggier, eventually turning into a useless marshland.
It can be reached by a single, narrow causeway that used to run over marshland.
Its stadium, which will host Portugal, was built on a mix of old housing and marshland.
We wandered into the Giacomini Wetlands, the newly restored sweep of marshland south of Tomales Bay.
"It's an open mostly flat marshland, where you are open to sniper fire," Mr. Gani said.
Some 150 years ago, it was a thriving retail center; 200 years ago, it was marshland.
New York was a natural fit, and the marshland of the eastern Bronx provided good value.
City planning maps label the area Mill Island, alluding to its previous incarnation as detached marshland.
His ancestor, Sir Thomas Grosvenor, married heiress Mary Davies and acquired what was then marshland in 1677.
Jamie allows Dougal a moment of heroism as he treads across the marshland and braves British gunfire.
Activists also want an analysis to determine if oil is ruining marshland and making its way to beaches.
While much of the wildlife refuge is marshland and swamp, parts of it are prairie and wooded land.
Nutria like to eat the roots of those plants, and when they do, the marshland can erode away.
Is there not a story in the wordless hum of marshland, the too-close crash of the waves?
When you're done with Disney, venture farther south into the Everglades, a watery wilderness formed by trees and marshland.
THE FLAT fields of reclaimed marshland that make up most of the Netherlands' agricultural landscape are known as "polders".
The town, which is set on three ridges separated by marshland and brackish creeks, occupies roughly a square mile.
Low-lying areas and marshland were commonly filled in with refuse, ashes, sand — and ballast from around the world.
Lala's paralyzed older brother remains trapped under the building, built on reclaimed marshland in Durres, the country's main port.
Another man, dressed in religious garb, stares out, his head wrapped in a thick landscape scene of a smoking marshland.
Windows in the dining room overlook marshland along the Pamet River, which runs just past the edge of the property.
The inhabitants of Graignes were swift to help, feeding the U.S. troops, relaying intelligence and retrieving their equipment from the marshland.
Launch Pad 39A, which underwent modifications to adapt to SpaceX's needs last year, sits on marshland not far from the Atlantic.
One example is upriver, at the La Bassée project, where flood waters are to be diverted into gravel pits and marshland.
Paes said the golf course, built in an environmentally sensitive marshland along the Atlantic Ocean, was constructed in accordance with regulations.
On the other side was marshland, above which a wooden bridge, marked private, led to a house hidden by the trees.
If you hear it, it becomes the ideally atmospheric accompaniment for Cunningham's nature study, with plops and glugs like marshland noises.
"We were stuck on the marshland and we were right next to saltwater," Nulgit said in an interview with the news station.
In particular, they wonder if there is any association with Veterans Stadium, which was built on marshland and was demolished in 245.
So it's no wonder that Miami and Fort Lauderdale are always flooding, because there is not enough marshland to absorb the subtropical rains.
Rivers and land merge in a giant delta of marshland and mangrove where Tabasco lies at the crook of the Gulf of Mexico.
Many residents fled, but after Saddam's overthrow in 2003, parts of the marshland were reflooded and around 250,000 Marsh Arabs have cautiously trickled back.
The Gowanus marshland was developed as a canal in the mid-1800s and for decades was a major transport lane to New York Harbor.
The suggestion that they be moved to the largely uninhabitable marshland several hours by boat from the mainland drew criticism from around the world.
Much of the CPRA's work involves dredging up sediment where it is abundant, including under the sea, and piping it to areas of threatened marshland.
The success of a landing at that location, in a basin that was basically reclaimed marshland and surrounded by mountains, depended on the element of surprise.
And then there is Barra da Tijuca, a fast-growing mini-Miami of car dealerships, marshland and identikit condominiums with names like "Sunflower" and "Villaggio Felicitá".
Marshland is born of rivers: as silt is sluiced down from the land to the sea, the tides in turn lift it back onto the land.
More than 250 years ago, French colonists known as the Acadians built dikes between two provinces on Canada's east coast, transforming marshland in between them into farmland.
And at my friend's house — it's amazing, but at the other side of the infinity pool is just a straight drop down, like, 10 feet into marshland.
Over the past decade the CPRA has restored 36,000 acres of marshland and dredged up 60 miles of artificial islands, to provide a buffer for the coastline.
And the stadium, along with the rest of Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, sits on the gelatinous marshland described as the "valley of ashes" by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
The marshland ecosystems in Louisiana depend on plants that not only provide natural filtration for water but actually hold the land together, and can help prevent flooding.
They began stocking it with grass, trees, toads, snakes and the first nests that, with government backing, eventually transformed the marshland into 13,000 acres of spectacular birdland.
The company fired the tappers — workers who coax latex from rubber trees — in June after a blaze they set to clear marshland for farming burned 332 plants.
The first Golden Age came in the early 17th century, nearly 500 years after the Templars cleared vast marshland — or marais, in French — to enlarge their domain.
Folded inside the country's largest subtropical wilderness, it is a flat 1.5 million acres of marshland, hardwood hammocks, tangled mangroves and cypress domes on the tip of Florida.
Without the layers of protection of the marshland and barrier islands, Boustany says, coastal Louisiana -- and the people who live here -- become more vulnerable to increasingly powerful storms.
Though it was the search for Shannan's body that led to the others, police didn't believe her case was linked and suspected she got lost in the inhospitable marshland.
The five-block walk from the subway to the restaurant where I was meeting a guy for a first date had already transformed my back into a swampy marshland.
In a 264.5 study, conservation group Wetlands International said the lake originally covered an area of nearly 232 square kilometers (2000 square miles), including 3003 sq km of marshland.
From there, I explored a rain-soaked marshland along the Volga river, a sun-scorched desert near the drained Caspian Sea, and a lush forest along the Taiga river.
But tucked into marshland by a Dunkirk forest, near the northern French town of Grande-Synthe are the remains of a refugee tent city we've heard very little about.
Starting with the droughts of the 1970s, many rural migrants moved to Dakar for work, and many settled in the only open space: marshland dried up by the drought.
Scheduled to open in mid-February, the new camp will offer alternative shelter to the 3003,500 people who are currently living in a marshland slum on the outskirts of town.
Scheduled to open in mid-February, the new camp will offer alternative shelter to the 2,500 people who are currently living in a marshland slum on the outskirts of town.
On a sunny May morning in 2014, as the Alaskan subarctic was beginning to warm up, park rangers watched a young female bear, Tundra, explore the marshland around the famous Brooks River.
The foreign body here takes the form of what's called the shimmer: a glistening, ever-growing force field that has descended on a swath of Florida marshland like an opalescent shower curtain.
Even with the new structure, the surrounding zone - 2,600 square km (1,000 square miles) of forest and marshland on the border of Ukraine and Belarus - will remain uninhabitable and closed to unsanctioned visitors.
Her story began before the city of Margate itself, a whimsy built in 1881 by a Philadelphia engineer and real estate speculator hoping to lure investors to empty marshland south of Atlantic City.
MANILA — Islamist militants seized an elementary school in the restive southern Philippines on Wednesday, holding 31 hostages, including students, for about 12 hours before escaping into a vast marshland area, the military said.
Nearly 6,000 years ago, in a seaside marshland in what is now southern Denmark, a woman with blue eyes and dark hair and skin popped a piece of chewing gum in her mouth.
Her 2016 short story collection, What Is Not Yours Is Not Yours, featured puppets with their strings slashed like a cut throat and a marshland full of drowned corpses that became its own city.
There's also the BP oil spill; oil-and-gas canals that are eating up marshland and leading to coastal erosion; and sea-level rise, which already is threatening many communities in the Louisiana bayou.
In the area around Cambridge, wealthy landowners hired a Dutch engineer to drain the marshland for arable farmland, arousing violent resistance from locals who had depended on the wetlands for fishing, fowling and hunting.
Emile Murekezi, who saw his garage in Kinamba, a marshland suburb, closed and demolished in 2015, said he is now doing part-time jobs while waiting to find an appropriate place to relocate his shop.
The Chernobyl plant, which is due to be covered next year by a 1.5 billion euro ($1.6 billion) steel-clad arch, is surounded by a 2,600 square km (1,000 square mile) exclusion zone of forest and marshland.
The Chernobyl reactor, which is due to be covered next year by a 1.5 billion euro ($1.6 billion) steel-clad arch, is surrounded by a 2,600 square km (1,000 square mile) exclusion zone of forest and marshland.
MANILA (Reuters) - Philippine troops shelled positions held by a small group of pro-Islamic State militants in southern marshland on Friday, as the military pushed on with a new offensive after the country's biggest urban battle in decades.
A stark line of dead oak trees dotting a narrow strip of land, barely wide enough to expand beyond the trunks, is where he likes to stop and show the effects of changing the composition of the marshland.
Kathryn Bennett, a postgraduate student in earth sciences at the University of New Hampshire, extracts samples of methane from funnels placed in an area of marshland at a research post at Stordalen mire in Sweden on July 29.
It was almost dusk on the last day of the trip by the time I reached hotel Rio do Prado, an eco-retreat hidden amid the lush marshland on the outskirts of the walled, medieval town of Óbidos.
Stella Tillyard's sometimes lovely, sometimes infuriating new novel, "Call Upon the Water," starts in the middle of the 17th century with the draining of the Great Level, the marshland around the Wash on the east coast of England.
This has in turn reduced the amount of organic matter the marshes produce, which acts as a counterweight to another reductive process, the constant settling and compacting of the organic platform that raises the marshland above the water table.
The project began in 000, when 2129 tons of sand were poured into the marshland, laying the foundation for architectural achievements like the Northeast Asian Trade Tower, a 68-story building that is now the tallest in South Korea.
Some 2,500 people — including hundreds of families — currently live in squalid conditions inside the camp in Grande-Synthe, which is built on a patch of marshland by the A16 motorway that connects Dunkirk to the port city of Calais.
Some 203,500 people — including hundreds of families — currently live in squalid conditions inside the camp in Grande-Synthe, which is built on a patch of marshland by the A16 motorway that connects Dunkirk to the port city of Calais.
Captain Nap Alcarioto, spokesman for the 6th Infantry Division, said troops were shelling BIFF gunmen in support of ground attacks in an area of marshland between the provinces of Maguindanao and Cotobato, about 170 km (106 miles) from Marawi.
Nassrolah Gani, a 35-year-old police officer whose unit is helping the military in recovering casualties from the crocodile-infested marshland, said his men would be easily lost in the swamps were it not for their MILF guides.
But the degradation of their environment — from changes in climate, algae bloom from fertilizer runoff, the corroding of coastal marshland from oil spills and hurricanes, and the changes in salinity of coastal waters from flooding — is taking its toll.
Seven damaged homes built on former Durres marshland had be to razed on Friday as they were left unsafe after the earthquake, said Bledi Cuci, the government minister in charge of running the rescue effort and assessing the damage.
Though it was the search for Gilbert's body that led to the discovery of the others, police didn't believe her case was linked and suspected she got lost in the inhospitable marshland and either died of exposure or accidentally drowned.
During her first stay, Lorde lived in a red apartment building that still stands at Auf dem Grat 21992, overlooking Thiel Park, a sloping stretch of green marshland near the university in the lush, villa-laden western district of Dahlem.
GRAIGNES, France (Reuters) - The lost U.S. paratrooper tapped on the door of the Rigault family's farmhouse in Normandy in the early hours of June 123, 1944, miles south of his intended drop zone and soaking from his landing in the surrounding marshland.
Isle de Jean Charles, Louisiana (CNN)Wenceslaus Billiot, an 21.5-year-old with suede-soft eyes and a bayou-French accent, asked me to follow him onto the second-story balcony of his stork-legged house here in the southern Louisiana marshland.
The promise of the Big U, which is being designed by the Danish firm Bjarke Ingels Group, is that the 16-foot-high steel and concrete berms will be cleverly disguised as skate parks, public pools, urban farms, bird sanctuaries, and marshland trails.
It is in an area of southwest Queens that has been shaken by killings this month, with an imam and his assistant gunned down in Ozone Park and a jogger, Karina Vetrano, found dead in an area of marshland in Howard Beach.
Mr. Rawbone-Viljoen and his wife, Roxy, South African vintners in their 50s who own two connected townhouses on the big yacht basin here, were among the first who signed onto the development project in 2007, when the terrain was still overgrown marshland.
In Pointe-aux-Chenes, a village on the frontier of solid land and marshland, where locally caught crabs, oysters and fish have fed a small native American community, the water has turned from friend to foe since eating away at a sacred site.
Like other women in the slums of Recife, which squat on stilts over mosquito-ridden marshland in northeast Brazil, Maria has few options if her child develops microcephaly, the condition marked by an abnormally small head and underdeveloped brain that has been linked to Zika.
" ♦ The marshland setting of Christobel Kent's psychological thriller THE DAY SHE DISAPPEARED (Sarah Crichton/Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $27) holds a "particular magic" for an old man named Victor, who appreciates the desolate beauty of this bleak spot "where the sea turned into a river.
But neither outcome was assured in the late 21976s and early '266s, when Ms. Del Deo and others fought the redevelopment of the Province Lands — 19533,21953 acres of beaches, dunes, marshland, forests and ponds that had been a common public asset since the days of Plymouth Colony.
Grain and wool were the principal commodities that elevated Ghent from a barren marshland to a wealthy trade center during the Middle Ages, and the grandiose gabled, scrolled and chiseled architectural results are still on display when you take a tour with De Bootjes Van Gent.
Anyone who has ever driven on the New Jersey Turnpike knows that, at a certain point in the road, the entire Manhattan skyline appears to rise from the surrounding marshland like a close-yet-so-far Land of Oz, both tempting and terrorizing with its mysterious jutting cutouts.
Some were dreaming of this project at least as far back as 1989, when the newly formed non-profit Coalition to Protect Coastal Louisiana first begged the state's lawmakers to "think boldly" to combat the already alarming rate of coastal land loss with one major, cornerstone request: Divert water and sediment from the Mississippi into the surrounding marshland.
Every one of them is filled with sentences and imagery that have the same shivery resonance as Cinderella's glass slipper or Sleeping Beauty's spindle, but they're all original to Oyeyemi: a wooden puppet with its strings slashed like a cut throat; a rose that kills its gardener with "a small precise puncture"; a marshland full of drowned corpses that becomes its own city.
What You Get 24 Photos View Slide Show ' WHAT A cedar-shingled home with four bedrooms and two and a half bathrooms, built in 163 from a design by the architect Robert A.M. Stern HOW MUCH $1.195 million SIZE 3,842 square feet PRICE PER SQUARE FOOT $311 SETTING This 1.75-acre property is in the private Talcott Farm subdivision, overlooking the Lieutenant River, with its surrounding woods and marshland.

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