0 past simple and past participle of row
1 to cause a boat to move through water by pushing against the water with oars (= poles with flat ends):
2 to argue, especially loudly:
He had himself rowed ashore to one of the few rock outcrops on the otherwise glacier-blanketed island.
The general idea is bor rowed from syntax.
They rowed as hard as they could for land, although making little progress, and the ice packed closer, threatening to crush the boat.
Some prodigious distances were rowed in search of otters.
This meant that the plates had to be prepared on board the schooner, then rowed ashore for exposure and immediately returned to the dark room.
But he notes a cer tain similarity in that today's protagonists "dress in theoretical garments bor rowed from the past" (p. 233).
Note undisturbed sandstone beds above and below the disturbed sequence (ar rowed).
Note the erosional base of the ignimbrite, and the two thin layers of fine ash (ar rowed) within the lower part of the pumice fall deposit.