10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «RHEOMORPHIC»
Discover the use of
rheomorphic in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
rheomorphic and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Interior Western United States
Folds,. fabrics,. and. kinematic. criteria. in. rheomorphic. ignimbrites. of. the.
Snake. River. Plain,. Idaho: Insights. into. emplacement. and. flow. Graham D.M.
Andrews Michael J. Branney Department of Geology, University of Leicester,
Leicester ...
Joel L. Pederson, Carol Merritt Dehler, 2005
2
Advanced Dairy Chemistry: Volume 1: Proteins, Parts A&B: Protein
5.3.2 Rheomorphic characteristics Caseins are neither globular, nor fibrillar
proteins nor molten globules nor random coils. The word rheomorphic has been
used to describe them (Holt and Sawyer, 1993) because a term is needed that
does ...
P. F. Fox, P. L. H. McSweeney, 2003
3
United States Geological Survey Professional Paper
Myrmekite is widespread in the rheomorphic quartz monzonite gneiss and occurs
most commonly along the margins of plagioclase adjacent to microcline (pl. 54 C)
. The myrmekite formed subsequent to the brecciation and deformation shown ...
4
Geological Survey Professional Paper
Radioactive minerals from rheomorphic or migmatitic rocks are not generally
suitable for this purpose, as such minerals are heterogeneous in character and
age. A laborious separation of accessory minerals into distinctive fractions,
however, ...
5
Volcanoes: Global Perspectives
Continual flow of the rheomorphic core of a deposit will disrupt the overlying
lesser welded portions of the flow that are riding piggy-back on its top. Pumice
fragments may be stretched and pulled apart by late-stage deformation, with
some ...
John P. Lockwood, Richard W. Hazlett, 2013
6
Principles of Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology
Near the stock, country rocks dip inward and become partly melted at the contact,
which is marked by a zone of rheomorphic breccia (Fig. 4.76). Within the intrusion
, compositional layering parallels the walls. Active convection of the magma ...
Anthony Philpotts, Jay Ague, 2009
7
Academic Press Dictionary of Science and Technology
Also, rheomorphic fold. rheidity Geology, the capacity of material to flow within
the earth. Rheiformes Vertebrate Zoology, the order of large flightless birds
containing the single family Rheidae. Rheinberg illumination Optics, a technique
in ...
Christopher G. Morris, 1992
8
The Palisades Sill, New Jersey
Rheomorphic Veins Rheomorphic veins and dikes up to 15 inches wide are
common in the top chilled dolerite zone, the mobilized sediment having
penetrated up to 60 feet into the intrusion. Some veins, only an inch wide,
penetrate 30 feet.
Kenneth Russell Walker, 1969
In places, the white rock blends into patches of igneous appearance containing a
larger proportion of clinopyroxene and plagioclase. From this contact rock,
rheomorphic veins up to 4 mm wide extend up to 20 cm out into the normal
buchite.
10
Advanced Dairy Chemistry: Volume 1A: Proteins: Basic ...
Other terms used to describe the considerable conformational flexibility of the
caseins include molten globule structure (Malin et al., 2005) and rheomorphic
structure (Holt and Sawyer 1993). Farrell et al. (2006b) predicted that orsl- and ...
Paul L. H. McSweeney, Patrick F. Fox, 2013