10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «INTERCOLLINE»
Discover the use of
intercolline in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
intercolline and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
On the Structure of Lavas which Have Consolidated on Steep ...
... smaller one ; whereas in the case of the Atlantic island, we have a linear series
of volcanic cones, rising at some points to a height of 6000 feet, whence lava and
scoriae have been poured, which have not only filled up the intercolline space, ...
2
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London
... at some points to a height of 6000 feet, whence lava and scoriae have been
poured, which have not only filled up the intercolline space, but have so
overtopped the secondary chain, as to bury it under a stratified mass 2000 feet in
thickness.
3
The Progressive Dictionary of the English Language: A ...
INTERCOLLINE. In ter col line (In'ter-kol"lln), a. [Lat. iitl«r, between, and •••ilia, a
hill.] Lying between hills or hillocks; specifically (deot. ), applied to those hollows
lying between the crater-shaped hillocks produced by the accumulations from ...
4
Handbook of geological terms, geology and physical geography
Intercolline (Lat. inter, between, and collis, a hill). — A term proposed by Sir
Charles Lyell to designate those valley-like spaces or hollows that occur in
volcanic regions between the cols or crateriform hillocks of accumulation, and
which are ...
Then, in the lower beds we perceive the lava streams flowing away from the old
cone of eruption, and mingling in the intercolline space with the currents ejected
from the Mongibello crater, until, in the levelling process thus being effected, the ...
Then, in the lower beds we perceive the l»v» streams flowing away from the old
cone of eruption, and mingling in the intercolline space with the currents ejected
from the Mongibello crater, until, in the levelling process thus being effected, the ...
Samuel Joseph Mackie, 1859
7
Handbook of Geological Terms: Geology and Physical Geography
Such intercolline spaces abound in all volcanic regions of sub-aerial origin.
Intermittent, Intermitting (Lat. inter, between, and mitto, I send)»Ceasing for a time
and then returning; ceasing and acting by turnsIntermitting Springs are those
which, ...
8
Advanced Text-book of Geology, Descriptive and Industrial
... nor by subsidence, nor by anticlinal or synclinal flexures, but simply by the
building up on two or more sides of erupted materials. Such intercolline spaces
abound in all volcanic regions of sub-aerial origin. Intermittent, Intermitting (Lat.
inter, ...
9
The North British Review
... as I propose to call it, an intercolline space between the two cones — a space,
gradually filled up by lavas and fragmentary matter, the stratification of which
would be occasionally horizontal, and always much less inclined than that
formed ...
10
Teide Volcano: Geology and Eruptions of a Highly ...
The valleys of La Orotava and Giiimar were explained by von Fritsch, Hartung
and Reiss as “intercolline Riiume”, valleys formed by lava accumulation at both
sides of the depression (von Fritsch 1867). Mount Teide in the Framework of
Modern ...
Juan Carlos Carracedo, Valentin R. Troll, 2013