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arch |
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archIn masonry, a curved structure that supports the weight of material over an open space, as in a bridge or doorway. The first arches consisted of several wedge-shaped stones supported by their mutual pressure. The term is also applied to any curved structure that is an arch in form only, such as the Arc de Triomphe, Paris, 1806–36. The Romans are credited with engineering the earliest round keystone arches, used for aqueducts. Other forms of arch include the pointed arch, the corbelled arch of the Maya Indians, the medieval lancet and ogee arches, and the Islamic horseshoe arch.
arch![]() Coastal arch at Durdle Door, on the Dorset coast, England. Beds of resistant limestone form the Durdle promontory. Weaknesses in the limestone, such as faults and joints, have been exploited by forces of erosion and mass wasting (downslope movements of loose materials such as sand). The sea has eroded the limestone to form first a cave, and finally an arch, as the cave reaches through to the far side of the Durdle promontory.
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a condition in which the fourth aortic arch on the right hand side may persist from the embryonic state instead of the left, causing a syndrome of persistent right aortic arch. The two most common aortic arch anomalies that cause airway compression are (1) a double aortic arch and (2) a right aortic arch with an aberrant left subclavian artery and left ligamentum arteriosum. 5,6) Right aortic arch with left-sided ligamentum arteriosum was thoroughly studied in the 1930s by Fray (7) and in the 1940s by Neuhauser (8) and thus has been termed "Neuhauser's anomaly. |
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