sheet pile screen - meaning and definition. What is sheet pile screen
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What (who) is sheet pile screen - definition

STRUCTURE DESIGNED TO CONFINE AND SUPPORT SOIL LATERALLY SO THAT IT CAN BE RETAINED ON UNNATURAL SLOPES
Retaining walls; Sheet piling; Sheet pile; Sheet-Pile; Sheet-Piling; Retaining structure; Cantilever retaining wall; Gravity wall; Retention wall; Retaining-wall; Retainer wall; Retaining Structures; Sheet piles
  • Rio de Janeiro state]], Brazil
  • Bored pile retaining wall in [[Lisbon]], Portugal
  • An example of crib wall
  • Construction types of gravity retaining walls
  • Various types of retaining walls
  • Stones of retaining wall used in preventing soil run-off in dale
  • Sheet pile wall
  • stone]] retaining wall

William Pile (civil servant)         
PILE, SIR WILLIAM DENNIS (1919–1997), CIVIL SERVANT
William Dennis Pile
Sir William Dennis Pile (1 December 1919 – 26 January 1997) was an English civil servant. Educated at St Catharine's College, Cambridge, he served in the Army during the Second World War, reaching the rank of Major.
baking tray         
  • binder clips]] to keep the parchment baking paper from sliding off.
  • Visual representation of European [[gastronorm sizes]].
FLAT BAKEWARE
Cookie sheet; Baking tray; Baking sheet
(baking trays)
A baking tray is the same as a baking sheet
. (BRIT)
N-COUNT
Beta sheet         
  • 1QRE}})
  • PDB]] file 1GWE at 0.88&nbsp;Å resolution). a) Front view, showing the antiparallel hydrogen bonds (dotted) between peptide NH and CO groups on adjacent strands. Arrows indicate chain direction, and electron density contours outline the non-hydrogen atoms. Oxygen atoms are red balls, nitrogen atoms are blue, and hydrogen atoms are omitted for simplicity; sidechains are shown only out to the first sidechain carbon atom (green). b) Edge-on view of the central two β-strands in a, showing the righthanded ''twist'' and the ''pleat'' of C<sup>α</sup>s and sidechains that alternately stick out in opposite directions from the sheet.
  • Psi-loop motif from [[Carboxypeptidase A]]
  • The Greek-key motif
  • β-hairpin]] motif
  • 2PEC}})
  •  Ramachandran (''φ'',&nbsp;''ψ'') plot of about 100,000 high-resolution data points, showing the broad, favorable region around the conformation typical for β-sheet amino acid residues.
COMMON MOTIF OF REGULAR SECONDARY STRUCTURE IN PROTEINST; STRETCH OF POLYPEPTIDE CHAIN TYPICALLY 3 TO 10 AMINO ACIDS LONG WITH BACKBONE IN AN EXTENDED CONFORMATION
Beta-sheet; Beta-pleated sheet; Β-sheet; Beta strand; Beta sheets; Β pleated sheets; Beta pleated sheet; Beta meander; Psi loop; Β sheet; Β sheets; Β-sheets; Beta ribbon; B pleated sheets; B sheet; B sheets; B-sheet; B-sheets; Β-strand; Beta Sheet; Beta Sheets; Pleated sheet; Beta-pleated sheets; Beta-Pleated Sheet; Greek key (protein structure); Β-pleated sheets; Betameander; Β strands; Β strand; Beta-strand
The beta sheet, (β-sheet) (also β-pleated sheet) is a common motif of the regular protein secondary structure. Beta sheets consist of beta strands (β-strands) connected laterally by at least two or three backbone hydrogen bonds, forming a generally twisted, pleated sheet.

Wikipedia

Retaining wall

Retaining walls are relatively rigid walls used for supporting soil laterally so that it can be retained at different levels on the two sides. Retaining walls are structures designed to restrain soil to a slope that it would not naturally keep to (typically a steep, near-vertical or vertical slope). They are used to bound soils between two different elevations often in areas of terrain possessing undesirable slopes or in areas where the landscape needs to be shaped severely and engineered for more specific purposes like hillside farming or roadway overpasses. A retaining wall that retains soil on the backside and water on the frontside is called a seawall or a bulkhead.