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1 located in La Hague (France) and Sellafield (Great Britain).
2 ract the three worldviews or ways of life in Great Britain.
3 e Vaccine Alliance and The Wellcome Trust of Great Britain.
4 betes and 877 population-based controls from Great Britain.
5 rrently President of the Genetics Society of Great Britain.
6 alleles on average than those in the rest of Great Britain.
7 er residing within the North Wales region of Great Britain.
8 ate the most hazardous of all occupations in Great Britain.
9 than 60 years ago in several populations in Great Britain.
10 d 84 people with vCJD up to Nov 10, 2000, in Great Britain.
11 ffice for Population Censuses and Surveys in Great Britain.
12 y care Otolaryngology and Audiology units in Great Britain.
13 y in young children in the United States and Great Britain.
14 ted to represent the variety of pavements in Great Britain.
15 atterns and causes of biodiversity change in Great Britain.
16 its in a sample of ~450,000 individuals from Great Britain.
17 amine recent trends in nicotine pouch use in Great Britain.
18 ded to PLWD near the end of life is lower in Great Britain.
19 treatment escalation decisions among PLWD in Great Britain.
20 n many countries around the world, including Great Britain.
21 (>3000 km(2)) the semi-natural grassland of Great Britain.
22 n 527 honey samples collected in 2019 across Great Britain.
23 2 insect occupancies across three decades in Great Britain.
24 hanisms to previously published results from Great Britain.
25 ing among youths and adults has increased in Great Britain.
26 ify the potential invasion of V. velutina in Great Britain.
27 offset by large numbers of new arrivals into Great Britain.
28 ep abortions in the United States but not in Great Britain.
29 75 bird species in relation to roads across Great Britain.
30 on of movement patterns of the population of Great Britain.
31 but were not yet established in the wild in Great Britain.
32 exposure assessment for NO2 back to 1991 for Great Britain.
33 l involving 23 breast screening units across Great Britain.
34 nt songbird, the great tit (Parus major), in Great Britain.
35 uence from each of 20 great tits tested from Great Britain.
36 ctious disease affecting wild tit species in Great Britain.
37 y with the strains of Mycobacterium bovis in Great Britain.
38 e 2001 epidemic of foot-and-mouth disease in Great Britain.
39 ual health outcomes in five ethnic groups in Great Britain.
40 from the ringed bird recovery scheme across Great Britain (1909-2013 inclusive) of both starlings an
44 calculus samples from individuals living in Great Britain (~2200 BCE to 1853 CE), including 127 well
45 red survey experiments in the United States, Great Britain and Canada examining the effectiveness of
46 genomic structures within subpopulations of Great Britain and establish a UK Biobank reference atlas
47 re from the Association of Coloproctology of Great Britain and Ireland (ACPGBI) could predict mortali
48 (BSACI), the Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland and the National Institute for
50 om the Society of Cardiothoracic Surgeons of Great Britain and Ireland on patients who underwent hear
51 include the Eurasian badger (Meles meles) in Great Britain and Ireland, the brushtail possum (Trichos
55 earch Council, Multiple Sclerosis Society of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Evelyn Trust, NHS Na
57 rosis Society, Multiple Sclerosis Society of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Novartis, UK Nationa
59 rage 700 m from a road, covering over 70% of Great Britain and over 40% of the total area of terrestr
60 from wild snakes collected from 2010-2016 in Great Britain and the Czech Republic for the presence of
63 pology among adults in private households in Great Britain and to obtain generalizable estimates of i
65 lsior, caused by Hymenoscyphus fraxineus, in Great Britain, and investigate whether this may be the c
66 emerging infectious disease in wild birds in Great Britain, apparently originating from viral incursi
68 r Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease recently seen in Great Britain are thought to have resulted from eating b
72 nd 1970s; however, total nectar provision in Great Britain as a whole had stabilized by 1978, and inc
73 m encephalopathy (BSE) epidemic in cattle in Great Britain assesses past, present and future patterns
74 obable vCJD cases (n = 136) were residing in Great Britain at disease onset, and were referred betwee
76 Delta are descendants of a dog that lived in Great Britain before the genetic isolation of breeds by
79 mans (n = 83) and birds (n = 79) isolated in Great Britain between 2000 and 2021 and analysed these a
80 NHS) centres in England, Wales, or Scotland (Great Britain) between 1985 and 2002, when they were you
81 virus (BTV) and Schmallenberg virus (SBV) in Great Britain, both of which are spread by Culicoides bi
82 liver failure (ALF) in the United States and Great Britain, but may be underrecognized in certain set
83 tional survey of tobacco and nicotine use in Great Britain, collected between October, 2020, and Marc
84 Vs were isolated predominantly in France and Great Britain, countries with higher vaccine coverage ra
86 d geographic-scale data contained within the Great Britain Database of Insects and their Food Plants.
87 ls with VHL disease have been established in Great Britain, Denmark, France, Holland, Italy, Japan, P
88 f bovine tuberculosis (BTB) is increasing in Great Britain, exacerbated by the temporary suspension o
89 and creative mindsets in eighteenth-century Great Britain explains the wave of innovations that drov
92 nomic diversity over a 45-year period across Great Britain for species supporting freshwater aquatic
94 d other top fruits) and their pollinators in Great Britain, for present and future climatic condition
95 creating a typology of beverage consumers in Great Britain (GB) based on observed beverage purchasing
96 herds placed under movement restrictions in Great Britain (GB) due to the suspected presence of bovi
98 n models estimated from historical data from Great Britain (GB) to explore the feasibility of such su
99 (ML) to predict herd-level bTB breakdowns in Great Britain (GB) with the aim of improving herd-level
100 recorded during the 2000 epidemic of CSF in Great Britain (GB), a spatially explicit, premises-based
101 etween weeds and carabids across farmland in Great Britain (GB), to test the hypothesis that wide-sca
102 These results indicate that, in modern era Great Britain, genetic effects contribute towards some o
105 participants as in those from other parts of Great Britain (ie, England and Wales) (P < 0.0001 for bo
108 used to describe the distribution of BTB in Great Britain in 1997, and suggest how such data could b
110 birth cohorts comprising all people born in Great Britain in a single week of 1946 (National Survey
111 ttle has increased substantially in parts of Great Britain in the past two decades, adversely affecti
112 scenicness" for geotagged photographs across Great Britain, in combination with data on citizen-repor
116 sually seen in non-Paridae with avian pox in Great Britain, lesions in Paridae were frequently large,
117 propose that nonnative plants introduced to Great Britain may function as analogues of novel anthrop
118 dustrial Revolution underway in 19th century Great Britain, migrants moved from farms to villages, fr
119 nsive geographical survey of distribution in Great Britain, Mycobacterium avium ssp. paratuberculosis
120 l panels from the United States (n = 5,240), Great Britain (n = 4,489), and Germany (n = 10,457) to r
122 recent decades in three European countries (Great Britain, Netherlands and Belgium) for plants and f
123 ysis of data for clinical trial enrolment in Great Britain over 6 years (2005-10), and reviewed the p
125 rates of chalk cliffs on the south coast of Great Britain over millennial time scales by coupling hi
126 e current foot-and-mouth disease epidemic in Great Britain over the first 2 months of the spread of t
127 n against the risk of pollination failure in Great Britain over the next 50 years; for instance, choo
128 We therefore conducted two surveys of the Great Britain population to determine their attitudes to
130 plant species data for 103 woodlands across Great Britain recorded in 1971 and in 2000 to test wheth
131 tative study of clinicians and caregivers in Great Britain, respondents reported individual-, institu
132 aried with latitude and longitude throughout Great Britain, revealing that the taxonomic composition
134 .5 km x 1.5 km each, comprising 0.5%-1.5% of Great Britain's land area show abrupt shifts in vegetati
135 are projected in a high-resolution model of Great Britain's land surface driven by two different cli
139 untries (Austria, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Finland, Great Britain, Serbia, Spain, Norway, Poland, Romania, S
140 a synthetic analysis of beetle fossils from Great Britain shows that beetles associated with herbivo
142 nline Action on Smoking and Health Smokefree Great Britain survey collected data between March 25 and
146 ic stochastic spatial model for bovine TB in Great Britain that combines within-farm and between-farm
147 nalyse trends in the frequency of species in Great Britain that provide key ecosystem functions--spec
148 American countries: Canada, France, Germany, Great Britain, the Netherlands, and the United States.
150 ied problems supported by detailed data from Great Britain: the commuter movement of workers between
151 om those isolated from voles in the 1930s in Great Britain, they had a high degree of similarity to t
154 11 species that stranded along the coast of Great Britain to quantify spatiotemporal trends over thr
155 tems modelling framework which is applied to Great Britain to simulate differences between the perfor
156 ST-F is currently undergoing field trials in Great Britain to support its licensure and commercialisa
157 ribution shifts for 76 cool-adapted moths in Great Britain using citizen science occurrence records f
160 d with sheep abortion during 2002 to 2008 in Great Britain, using multilocus sequence typing (MLST),
161 osis of primary congenital glaucoma (PCG) in Great Britain was 5.41 in 100,000 (1/18,500) live births
164 ng and census data on all livestock farms in Great Britain, we analysed the risk factors determining
165 Here, combining two monitoring datasets from Great Britain, we reveal how the population dynamics of
169 three recent outbreaks that have occurred in Great Britain where the source has already been identifi
170 article applies this approach to the case of Great Britain, where despite strong commitments to susta
171 em gambling specifically for young adults in Great Britain, where gambling has become more widely ava
172 f medicine in Canada, the United States, and Great Britain, where he held professorships at McGill Un
173 l scales from 0.01 to 10(8) square meters in Great Britain which show that the slope of the log-log p
174 y of young adults aged 16-24 years living in Great Britain, who were selected from a YouGov online pa
175 mon trends in insect occupancies, showing no Great Britain-wide decline since 1990, but instead local
176 tional outcomes and that there is a distinct Great Britain-wide geography to these inequalities.
177 ree river catchments (Medway, Dee and Stour; Great Britain), with differing levels of connectivity, t