HARP SEAL that swam ashore in Perth Amboy returns to water
HARP SEAL found on Delaware River shore in El.sin.boro
The Star-Ledger
Harp Seal is found in OLD BRIDGE
The Star-Ledger
Harp Seal is found in OLD BRIDGE
Seal. An impression upon wax, wafer, of some other tenacious substance capable of being impressed.(the mind)
A seal is a particular sign made to attest in the formal manner, the execution of an instrument.
Common seal. A seal adopted and used by a corporation for authenticating its corporate acts and executing legal instruments.
also Corporate Seal, Great seal, Private seal, Privy seal, Public seal, Quarter seal, Seal days, Seal office, and Seal Paper.
seal[Anglo-saxon. seol, seolh] an aquatic carnivorous mammal
that which confirms or authenticates
Seal is an acronym for Sea, Air, and Land(U.S. Navy military special forces team member)
instrument- one who or that which, is made a means
Angels(Masons) play instruments called harps
America is an instrument that has served its purpose.
In geology, the sial is the upper layer of the Earth's crust made of rocks rich in silicates and aluminium minerals. It is sometimes equated with the continental crust because it is absent in the wide oceanic basins, but "sial" is a geochemical term rather than a plate tectonic term.
Geologists often refer to the rocks in this layer as felsic, because they contain high levels of feldspar, an aluminium silicate mineral series. However, the sial "actually has quite a diversity of rock types, including large amounts of basaltic rocks."
The name 'sial' was taken from the first two letters of silica and of aluminium. The sial is often contrasted to the 'sima,' the next lower layer in the Earth, which is often exposed in the ocean basins; and the nife, the nickel-iron core. These divisions of the Earth's interior (with these names) were first proposed by Eduard Suess in the 19th century. This model of the outer layers of the earth has been confirmed by petrographic, gravimetric, and seismic evidence.
Geologists often refer to the rocks in this layer as felsic, because they contain high levels of feldspar, an aluminium silicate mineral series. However, the sial "actually has quite a diversity of rock types, including large amounts of basaltic rocks."
The name 'sial' was taken from the first two letters of silica and of aluminium. The sial is often contrasted to the 'sima,' the next lower layer in the Earth, which is often exposed in the ocean basins; and the nife, the nickel-iron core. These divisions of the Earth's interior (with these names) were first proposed by Eduard Suess in the 19th century. This model of the outer layers of the earth has been confirmed by petrographic, gravimetric, and seismic evidence.
The 7th Seal
Green Horseman