「glacial」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

glacial

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  • Its solution in glacial acetic acid, by oxidation with chromic acid,
  • He proved that glacial acetic acid and vinegar acetic acid were the
  • is to add 4-methylpropiophenone dissolved in glacial acetic acid to bromine, creating an oil fract
  • he laboratory, solutions of alkyl nitrites in glacial acetic acid are sometimes used as mild nitrat
  • by the treatment of dry cadmium acetate with glacial acetic acid and acetyl bromide.
  • It also dissolves in glacial acetic acid and a diluted mixture of nitric a
  • nts for the production of ethylene glycol and glacial acetic acid.
  • lace and then several drops of 0.2% iodine in glacial acetic acid.
  • her aluminium hydroxide, acetic anhydride and glacial acetic acid in water, forming the basic alumi
  • anhydrous Pb(SCN)2 is treated with bromine in glacial acetic acid to afford a 0.1M solution of thio
  • It is soluble in methanol and glacial acetic acid.
  • r esterification) between isoamyl alcohol and glacial acetic acid as shown in the reaction equation
  • In one synthetic path, nitroethane in a glacial acetic acid solution with an ammonium acetate
  • reaction of a magnesium/calcium compound with glacial acetic acid.
  • The lake is natural, having been formed by glacial action and is 50 hectares in size.
  • ed within a rock hollow formed as a result of glacial action during the ice ages.
  • peatlands across the North-West formed by the glacial action at the end of the last Ice Age, and pa
  • nstones Formation of the Old Red Sandstone by glacial action during the succession of recent ice ag
  • well as numerous valleys have been formed by glacial action over hundreds of thousands of years.
  • Beacons National Park Fan Fawr was subject to glacial action in the ice ages.
  • kilometre (0.62 mi) wide, and was created by glacial action during the last ice age.
  • canyons, showing millennia of erosion, where glacial action would have otherwise smoothed out the
  • ny between the two World Wars which suggested glacial action creating the craters.
  • The crater has been completely filled by glacial action, so that no trace appears on the surfa
  • a disproportionately wide valley, created by glacial action.
  • es, and the part played in their formation by glacial action.
  • Glacial activity spanned virtually the whole of Carbo
  • n from around 150 published sources, covering glacial activity mainly from the past 30000 years.
  • Glacial activity has shaped the landscape 3,000 metre
  • although a common origin for diamicton is by glacial activity.
  • he canyon is Phelps Lake which was created by glacial activity.
  • This was the last glacial advance that entered Michigan and covered onl
  • the so-called Drenthe II stage and the final glacial advance of the Warthe stage.
  • lows covered the floor of Behm Canal, another glacial advance scoured away much of the flow, leavin
  • These annual glacial advances and recessions cause parallel ridges
  • Glacial Aerial Tramway Kaprun III has two stretches,
  • Pillar of the Glacial Aerial Tramway Kaprun III, tallest aerial lif
  • Pylon of the Glacial Aerial Tramway Kaprun, the tallest in the wor
  • The Urstrom is a geologists' name for a great glacial age river of the Polish and north German plai
  • iverted waters of the Bridge River, which are glacial and milky-green in colour.
  • ks formed from sediments deposited by marine, glacial and freshwater sources between 355 and 180 mi
  • Palaeozoic rocks of Norway, and with the late glacial and post-glacial changes of sea level in the
  • his Ph.D. in 1942, he became a specialist in glacial and periglacial morphology.
  • ey and Hendon station found a large extent of glacial beds and fossils, and these were thought to e
  • This is linked to its glacial beginnings.
  • Rollstone Hill in Fitchburg, where a massive glacial boulder stood (it is now on the small triangl
  • Glacial centres expanded across the continents, produ
  • dge, the slopes again steepen, reflecting the glacial cirque between Southwest Hunter and Hunter th
  • f the Steinerne Rinne, a huge couloir and old glacial cirque, that runs southwards up to the crossi
  • ciated during the ice ages and at least three glacial cirques are evident, of which Craig Cerrig-gl
  • Glacial cirques form the heads of Tuckerman Ravine on
  • western wall of Pinkham Notch, holds several glacial cirques.
  • e and limestone basin, 30 - 40 feet (12 m) of glacial clay and silt and a 1 - 2-foot (0.61 m) mixtu
  • st deposited under extremely cold, dry post - glacial conditions.
  • The mountain has a north facing glacial cwm known as Y Gylchedd.
  • s steep cliffs, that form the backwall of the glacial Cwm Dulyn.
  • amatic morphology: with two fine aretes, dark glacial cwms and splendid rocky character.
  • "Response of a major river system to the last glacial cycle: geomorphology and internal architectur
  • he Fort Wayne Moraine, which was a deposit of glacial debris that acted as a natural dam at the sit
  • nd carbonate rock, including readily-attacked glacial debris, which would releasing large amounts o
  • les) in diameter, deeply eroded and buried in glacial debris.
  • The river valley was filled with glacial debris.
  • the "Big Stone" as it is known locally, is a glacial deposit on the moorlands of Tatham Fells, sit
  • d on a shelf or terrace of land, probably the glacial deposits formed after the creation and later
  • The causeway is made of glacial deposits left by receding ice sheets at the e
  • The rock is common in glacial deposits just south of its source location, a
  • e soil in Leelanau Peninsula is complex, with glacial deposits of clay, sand, and loam on top of be
  • ume report, for which he authored sections on glacial deposits, Paleozoic and Precambrian bedrock g
  • astern Wisconsin, a region mantled with thick glacial deposits, led him to recognize multiple episo
  • countless thousands of years of sediment and glacial deposits.
  • athered look of other rocks in Rhode Island's glacial deposits.
  • The lowest slopes are generally covered in glacial diamicton derived from the igneous lithologie
  • ion and led to his appointment as head of the glacial division of the US Geological Survey in 1881.
  • ion types, which have developed on the acidic glacial drift overlying magnesian limestone that is c
  • erve are lakes formed in shallow valleys when glacial drift blocked off the outflow to the sea.
  • ciated portion of North America devoid of the glacial drift of surrounding regions.
  • nd varied situations, although it prefers the glacial drift and well-drained borders of streams.
  • View, but progressed slowly due to the dense glacial drift below.
  • y, which has eroded deeply into an underlying glacial drift of boulder clay, sands and gravels, is
  • most of Iowa, which is on the whole is absent Glacial Drift.
  • ility of early geologists to find evidence of glacial drift.
  • Kensington is home to 16 named hills of glacial drumlin origin; the highest, Indian Ground Hi
  • ase of Eemian interglacial phase before final glacial episode of Pleistocene 126,000 ± 5,000 years
  • ly formed by the terminal moraine of the last glacial episode (Wisconsin glaciation).
  • rimary mechanism of sediment transport during glacial episodes of the Pleistocene when sea levels w
  • The effect of the glacial epoch upon the distribution of insects in Nor
  • of Man" "On the Changes of Climate during the Glacial Epoch" "On the Glacial Phenomena of the Outer
  • In the glacial era, the Ythan River at this point would have
  • Glacial eratics litter its slopes, with a large one l
  • s, grey wagtails and heron.During the Ice Age glacial erosion eroded one side of the valley resulti
  • Glacial erosion was likewise responsible for scooping
  • usetts landscape, the peninsula was shaped by glacial erosion and moraine deposits left by retreati
  • This glacial erosion resulted in the very steep northern a
  • e District, subscribing much of the layout to glacial erosion.
  • Cyclopean stairs form as a result of glacial erosion.
  • c quartzite, but before a regional episode of glacial erosion; if correct it occurred between 900-6
  • Plastic moulding, gouging and other glacial erosional features become present upon the gl
  • s of the data revealed giant sand waves, huge glacial erratic boulders and several uncharted wrecks
  • The Glumsten, a glacial erratic is mentioned as early as in the 11th
  • the rock comes from Canada and is the largest glacial erratic rock in the Willamette Valley.
  • Doane Rock is a glacial erratic located in Eastham, Massachusetts on
  • It is a glacial erratic boulder on which a cast-iron memorial
  • t be certain, however, whether or not it is a glacial erratic because its rock types match those of
  • d after Dighton Rock, an 11-foot (3.4-m) high glacial erratic that once sat on the banks of the Tau
  • Big Rock (also known as Okotoks Erratic) is a glacial erratic situated between the towns of Okotoks
  • Since 1901 a glacial erratic marks the place of death on the forme
  • The stone is a glacial erratic located in desolate peatland.
  • The Bowder Stone is a large glacial erratic in Borrowdale at grid reference NY254
  • Several glacial erratic boulders are also found on the Chase,
  • This is a glacial erratic, brought from probably hundreds of mi
  • ed up by the glacier and deposited later as a glacial erratic.
  • the rock is often used as a type example of a Glacial Erratic.
  • ows many signs of the last ice age, including glacial erratics (boulders left behind when the ice r
  • ndinavia, northern North America, and Russia, glacial erratics are common.
  • they were brought much nearer to the site as glacial erratics by the Irish Sea Glacier.
  • Geologists have found glacial erratics on Rattlesnake at heights up to this
  • e boulder is one of the world's largest known glacial erratics.
  • ubglacial to proglacial record of Pleistocene glacial events.
  • Its valley contains the best-developed glacial features in the Kosciuszko National Park alpi
  • Schematic drawing of glacial features illustrating how moulins transport s
  • f the Niagara Escarpment and is noted for its glacial features, especially potholes.
  • is characterized by a till moraine and other glacial features, such as kames and kettles.
  • the Maligne Valley watershed which is mainly glacial fed.
  • ute was dug through a highly unstable area of glacial fill, making it extremely treacherous.
  • covered in Victoria Road and seen as a chance glacial find, there is no record of prehistoric finds
  • Cairlinn, Ulster Scots: Carlinford Loch) is a glacial fjord or sea inlet that forms part of the bor
  • In 1934, however, there was calamity: a glacial flood roared down the Mendoza canyon and comp
  • sses beneath the park known as the "Wisconsin Glacial Flow", an ancient river channel now filled wi
  • e wide at its center, The Lake was created by glacial forces in a previous Ice Age.
  • at room temperature unless it is in its pure glacial form.
  • Names (US-ACAN) (1997) after husband and wife glacial geologists Thomas B. Kellogg and Davida E. Ke
  • g, and during the summers he investigated the glacial geology of northern Europe and the British Is
  • His well-known memoir on glacial geology written in collaboration with Edmund
  • t the University of Michigan and authority on glacial geology of the central United States.
  • Henry Carvill Lewis's Papers and Notes on the Glacial Geology of Great Britain and Ireland, issued
  • umberland' (vols i-vi); 'Contributions to the Glacial Geology of Spitzbergen' (with Dr J W Gregory,
  • shed in 1894 entitled Papers and Notes on the Glacial Geology of Great Britain and Ireland, edited
  • 1879 to Minnesota to study the resources and glacial geology of that state.
  • work on the geology of gold bearing minerals, glacial geology, and for his description of the mutua
  • ncluding alluvial chronology, periglacial and glacial geology, wind action, soil and vegetative eff
  • He became an authority on glacial geology, and wrote much, especially in conjun
  • as a Site of Special Scientific Interest for Glacial Geology.
  • d prominently in the study and development of glacial geology.
  • positioning systems, geodesy, crustal motion, glacial geophysics, airborne geospatial systems, seis
  • the Eastern side a happenstance of the final glacial gouging.
  • monstrates a sequence of fluvial (or possibly glacial) gravels, marine intertidal silts and marine
  • The glacial grooves on Kelleys Island are cut into the Co
  • Glacial grooves stemming from the Wisconsin glaciatio
  • 33° to 30° N. latitude, including most of the glacial Gulf Coast from about 84° W. longitude.
  • eresting area when it comes to looking at the glacial history of Britain.
  • In glacial ice this zone is at approximately 30 m (100 f
  • around 12000 years ago at the retreat of the glacial ice .
  • A marginal lake of meltwater trapped between glacial ice sheet and the Lincolnshire Wolds spilled
  • The main valley was excavated by glacial ice during the course of the ice ages as it b
  • n glaciation, the southernmost penetration of glacial ice into what was to become the Midwestern Un
  • The mere originated as a detached mass of glacial ice melted in situ towards the end of the las
  • owe their steepness in part to the action of glacial ice during the succession of ice ages.
  • 1850), there has been a reduction of mountain glacial ice worldwide of 50% since 1850.
  • oraine marking the maximum extent of the last glacial ice sheet to reach the northeastern coast.
  • steep lava cliffs from their interaction with glacial ice and can have thicknesses of 100 m (330 ft
  • cene period when this area was buried beneath glacial ice during the last ice age.
  • Precipitation and therefore glacial ice contain water with a low 18O content.
  • The glacial ice scraped off and carried with it rocks and
  • ll as indicating the direction of flow of the glacial ice, the depth and extent of weathering of th
  • t a vertical pipe right through the overlying glacial ice, instead forming hyaloclastite and pillow
  • arge amounts of 16O water are being stored as glacial ice, the 18O content of oceanic water is high
  • in UMB49T) was isolated from 120,000 year old glacial ice, 3,042 metres (1.9 mi) deep, from Greenla
  • Firn becomes glacial ice-the long-lived, compacted ice that glacie
  • l in the region soon after the retreat of the glacial ice.
  • shape as a result of their confinement within glacial ice.
  • er, ice sheet, ice field or any other body of glacial ice.
  • forty years studying the history embedded in glacial ice.
  • lcanism and related phenomena associated with glacial ice.
  • ed the laminated or ribboned structure of the glacial ice; and ascribed the movement of glaciers to
  • e Pleistocene and displays major landforms of glacial influence.
  • associated with his studies of sea level and glacial isostasy during the Quaternary.
  • For a time, it was thought that the Glacial Kame Culture did not produce ceramics, but th
  • Excavation of Glacial Kame sites frequently yields few projectile p
  • in, Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Ontario, the glacial Kame peoples use the gravel ridges formed by
  • The Zimmerman Site, a leading Glacial Kame site
  • g the most common types of artifacts found at Glacial Kame sites are shells of marine animals and g
  • The Glacial Kame Culture was a culture of Archaic people
  • s reason, it appears that different groups of Glacial Kame peoples independently developed differen
  • k savanna, tall grass praries, and an ancient glacial kettle lake.
  • k lies on a sandur formed from the outwash of Glacial Lake Grantsburg.
  • Lake Wisconsin; for the prehistoric lake, see Glacial Lake Wisconsin.
  • , named for geologist William G. Tight, was a glacial lake located in what is present-day Ohio, Ken
  • ed, a stony hill that was once an island when glacial Lake Chicago covered the area thousands of ye
  • Glacial Lake Connecticut formed over what is now Long
  • main product of his many years of study ("The Glacial Lake Agassiz") was published in 1895 as Monog
  • Spring Lake is a small glacial lake in the Town of Berlin, Rensselaer County
  • anticline surface layer, presumably chalk, by glacial lake outburst floods
  • In other cases, such as Glacial Lake Missoula and Glacial Lake Wisconsin in t
  • s Point, the meltwater would have flowed into Glacial Lake Wisconsin, a prehistoric proglacial lake
  • Glacial Lake Minong was a proglacial lake that formed
  • Glacial Lake Duluth was a proglacial lake that formed
  • Lake Bled (Slovene: Blejsko jezero) is a glacial lake in the Julian Alps in northwestern Slove
  • ibrarian who is best known for his studies of glacial Lake Agassiz.
  • Glacial Lake Minong
  • Glacial Lake Duluth
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