How To Use Dust devil In A Sentence
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They can cause dust devils and whirlwinds, though these are nothing when compared to the immense dust storms that can occur.
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Chickens clucked about, scratching up dust into tiny dust devils with their claws.
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Gullies, streaks, ripples and dust devil tracks on Russell Crater Dunes.
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The dust devil column is clearly defined and is clearly bent in the down wind direction.
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Scientists who chase dust devils report that the tiny twisters can produce a small magnetic field that changes magnitude between 3 and 30 times per second.
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The birds spun like a blue-black dust devil before resettling out of sight.
Slice Of Cherry
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Near the end of the movie, the base of the dust devil becomes much wider.
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Atreya then went on to show that substantially greater quantities of H2O2 can be produced by triboelectric fields in dust devils and dust storms and through saltation.
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The cloud seemed to shimmer slightly, and then it coalesced into two whirling dust devils that raced away towards the enemy at phenomenal speed.
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The film opens with a tableaux of a grimy industrial area where a man loiters impassively, slouching against a wall, kicking a bottle down the street, watching the wind whip up dust devils on a vacant patch of gravel.
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Also near the end of the movie dust devil seems to move faster across the surface.
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Numerous dark dust devil tracks can be seen meandering across the dunes.
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Hey, man; check it out, there are men, women, and children over in that Holy Hell of a hot desert land, those refugees, who are living in tents or make-do constructions out in the flat middle of a treeless, totally mangey land, this land of dust devils and mirages, this desert of where only human compassion can save them--yeah sure.
What's Hotter Than Hot?
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These dust devils were not uncommon in the desert, but had increased in number as gas energy drill rigs and work trucks broke up the cryptobiotic crust that holds the fine soil in place.
Bird Cloud
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On a typical summer day, several dozen dust devils spin across the dry lake bed in Nevada's Eldorado Valley.
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Dust devils are swirling vortexes that can tower several miles high and a quarter-mile (about a half a kilometer) wide at the base.