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"They're only preservable if you keep them running," he said.
"It's partly a doomed effort to preserve an old way of life that's not preservable."
Instead, he said, they chose "to preserve whatever is preservable" and blend the new and old.
A preservable mediaeval tower house was found to be at the centre of the demolished Georgian building.
"I felt the building was eminently preservable."
They were disposed of two weeks after their discovery on account of their not being preservable.
The notion of a record as something that is fixed, "recorded," identifiable and preservable is called into question in electronic information systems.
But, he added, as previous studies have shown, the Admiral's Row houses "are neither financially nor physically preservable."
The Turkish bath is the only Muslim building to have been saved as well as some other preservable buildings of the town.
Plants and algae produce the most preservable compounds, which are listed according to their preservation potential by Tegellaar (see reference).
Together, the two settlements have been classified as "preservable traditional settlements" thus retaining their traditional style and character.
In terms of preservable anatomy in the fossil record, bacteria lie right next to the left wall of minimal conceivable complexity.
These days, Mr. Ginsburg contends, every community perceives every potential development site as potential preservable space.
Cheese is basically an easily transportable and preservable form of milk (usually from cows, but also from goats, sheep and other animals).
Traditionally made tsukudani is preservable and has been favored as a storable side dish in Japanese kitchens since the Edo period.
(As a paleontologist, I like to think of this wall as the lower limit of "conceivable, preservable complexity" in the fossil record.)
DULL FACT: Memory and personality are embodied in preservable brain structures.
Woollahra was the home of John McGarvie Smith, a metallurgist and biochemist who produced the first preservable anthrax vaccine.
Its ephemeral quality even reinforces a common perception that apart from a century or two of "tribal" sculpture, Africa lacks any significant body of preservable, displayable art.
The community of organisms preserved is a good representation of the (preservable) community; the biasing effects of time-averaging and preferential decay seem to be minimal.
Dance, Mr. Lubovitch noted, is by nature ephemeral: "Whether or not it is or ever was a preservable art is a big question.
In particular, do they believe (1) that repair machines will be able to correct the kind of cross-linking damage produced by fixation, and (2) that memory is indeed embodied in a preservable form?
As our purchases were purchased, though, it became apparent that we'd all picked out the same sorts of things, the emphasis on meats and breads and fruits, not preserved or even particularly preservable, unless you were into vacuum storage.
Even by the beginning of the Cambrian period, when fossils start to become easy to find and many different kinds of animals had acquired preservable hard parts, it is possible to classify the fossils found in the rocks into broadly similar groups.
"To the extent that buildings are preservable, we have done so," Mr. Deutsch said; he notes that the development corporation has already spent $200,000 and will soon spend an additional $100,000 to stabilize the Navy Yard's historic hospital and surgeon's house.