Embayment





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Ground-Water Flow Analysis of the Mississippi Embayment Aquifer System, South-Central United States (U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper, 1416)
Gravity of the New Madrid Seismic Zone : A Preliminary Study (Investigations of the New Madrid Seismic Zone)
The Prairie Creek Embayment and Lower Paleozoic strata of the southern Mackenzie Mountains
Ground-Water Flow Analysis of the Mississippi Embayment Aquifer System, South-Central United States (U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper, 1416)
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Gravity of the New Madrid Seismic Zone : A Preliminary Study (Investigations of the New Madrid Seismic Zone)
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The Prairie Creek Embayment and Lower Paleozoic strata of the southern Mackenzie Mountains
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Eocene to miocene stratigraphy of the Willunga embayment
The Wissey Embayment : evidence for pre-Iron Age occupation accumulated prior to the Fenland Project
The lower Paleozoic Misty Creek Embayment : Selwyn Basin, Yukon and Northwest Territories
Eocene to miocene stratigraphy of the Willunga embayment
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The Wissey Embayment : evidence for pre-Iron Age occupation accumulated prior to the Fenland Project
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The lower Paleozoic Misty Creek Embayment : Selwyn Basin, Yukon and Northwest Territories
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About Embayment

Touching the derivation of the name Embayment, I confess
myself, with sorrow, equally at fault. Among a multitude of opinions
upon this delicate point- some acute, some learned, some sufficiently the
reverse -- I am able to select nothing which ought to be considered satisfactory.
Notwithstanding the obscurity which thus envelops the date of the foundation
of Vondervotteimittis, and the derivation of its name, there can be no doubt,
as I said before, that it has always existed as we find it at this epoch.
The oldest man in the borough can remember not the slightest difference in
the appearance of any portion of it; and, indeed, the very suggestion of such
a possibility is considered an insult. The site of the village is in a perfectly
circular valley, about a quarter of a mile in circumference, and entirely
surrounded by gentle hills, over whose summit the people have never yet ventured
to pass. For this they assign the very good reason that they do not believe
there is anything at all on the other side.

Modified text originally written by Edgar Allan Poe.