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boundary marker

   Also found in: Legal, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
boundary marker [′bau̇n·drē ‚mär·kər]
(navigation)
A radio transmitter operating at 75 megahertz and installed near the approach end of landing runway (3.9 nautical miles ± 1000 feet, or 7123 ± 305 meters) and approximately on the localizer course line.

boundary marker
A marker or inscribed stone that designates some type of boundary; for example, see meridian stone.


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Among the contexts they explore are 19th-century Catholic France, the reformer and legislator seen by French Protestants, Hungarian religion, a marginalized memory in Germany, missionary memory and Chinese Protestant identity, Calvin as a negative boundary marker in American Lutheran self-identity 1871-1934, his image within Mormonism, and Mark Twain's burlesque of him as The French Barber.
They used the "harvested" stone to build stone walls for boundary markers and animal fencing.
At Rainhill, representing its role as the birthplace of the railways, the boundary marker shows an image of Stephenson's Rocket.
 
 
 
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