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Ochre (/ˈoʊkər/ OH-kər; from
Ancient Gr**** ὤχρα (ṓkhra), from ὠχρός (ōkhrós) 'pale'), iron
ochre, or
ocher in
American English, is a
natural clay earth...
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Ustochrepts are
characterised by an
ochric epipedon, a warm soil
temperature regime and an
ustic soil
moisture regime.
Ochric epipedon refers to
surface characteristics...
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Antimony ochre Attic ochre Cobalt ochre Golden ochre Iron
ochre Lead
ochre This
disambiguation page
lists articles ****ociated with the
title Ochre. If an...
- ac****ulation of clays, iron oxide,
aluminium oxide or
organic matter. They have an
ochric or
umbric horizon and a
cambic subsurface horizon. In the
World Reference...
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Yamnaya culture or the
Yamna culture, also
known as the Pit
Grave culture or
Ochre Grave culture, is a late
Copper Age to
early Bronze Age
archaeological culture...
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difference in clay content),
Endic (the
argic horizon starts below 50 cm) and
Ochric (relatively
small concentrations of
organic carbon) apply.
Bringing the...
- Woman-
Ochre is a 1955
abstract expressionist oil
painting by Dutch/American
artist Willem de Kooning, part of his
Woman series from that period. It was...
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Ochre Court is a
large châteauesque
mansion in Newport,
Rhode Island,
United States.
Commissioned by
Ogden Goelet, it was
built at a cost of $4.5 million...
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Golden ochre, less
often Gold
Ochre (French: Ocre d’or, German: Gold
Ocker от
Ancient Gr****: ὠχρός yellow-pale,
orange or
french ochre (obsolete)) — one...
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Pisaster ochraceus,
generally known as the
purple sea star,
ochre sea star, or
ochre starfish, is a
common seastar found among the
waters of the Pacific...