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Reservoir plates are also commercially available. [24] Reservoir plates have columns of wells (as in 96-well, 24-well, etc. plates) that are fused into single wells, so that they provide additional volume for multichannel pipettes. Like deepwell plates or blocks, they often follow a de facto standard height of 44 mm.
Here, I redesigned the 96-well plate figure working from an overlay of a 96-well plate manufacturer technical drawing, and the official SLAS/ANSI 96-well plate size standards. Designed in Inkscape. 16:42, 29 May 2020: 672 × 452 (70 KB) FlowerFaerie087: Minor edit for consistent, smooth image: 15:43, 29 May 2020: 672 × 452 (76 KB) FlowerFaerie087
I designed the figure from an overlay of a 384-well plate manufacturer technical drawing. Designed in Inkscape. The Inkscape "Tiled clone" tool where the percentage row/column shift was calculated by (well spacing/well width-1.00)*100 (in this case, 12.5%), was essential to producing regularly spaced wells.
This assay is presumably very easy to do on a 24-well plate and read with a plate reader; i wouldn't want to count twenty-odd samples on a haemocytometer. The formation of the dye is catalysed by mitochondrial enzymes, so this assay really measures the quantity of those enzymes, right?
At the Kuril–Kamchatka Trench, the Pacific plate is subducting beneath the Okhotsk microplate, a microplate formerly considered to be part of the North American plate. The convergence rate ranges from ≈ 75 mm (3.0 in)/yr in the north to ≈83 mm (3.3 in)/yr at the southern end.
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The first statewide geologic map of Georgia was published in 1825. It was a 1:1,000,000 scale map of Georgia and Alabama published by Henry Schenck Tanner. [3] In 1849 W.T. Williams published the geological features for the state on a 1:120,000 scale map within George White's (1849) Statistics of the State of Georgia report. [4]