the presence of ink in areas not called for by the artwork May be the extension of ink, generally in one direction, starting from origin into an area not specified May also be caused by handling substrates with wet ink impressions
Climbing technique in which the climber attempts to stand on the rock by getting as much friction as possible between his shoe and the rock Generally this involves placing the sole or toe of the shoe directly on top of the hold or rock surface, then pushing and twisting the foot The opposite of edging
In the CCDs, X-ray events may still fall on the image registers while charge from a previous imageframe is being read out This will be particularly true for the pn CCD in which there is no shielded data store section Thus bright point sources will produce excess events in the same CCD columns (also called "out of time events")
Gaining a grip on the rock using the surface area of the soft rubber soles of the climbing shoe to create enough friction to step upward, as distinguished from edging