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batholith
[ bath-uh-lith ]
noun
- a large body of intrusive igneous rock believed to have crystallized at a considerable depth below the earth's surface; pluton.
batholith
/ 藞b忙胃蓹藢la瑟t; 藞b忙胃蓹l瑟胃 /
noun
- a very large irregular-shaped mass of igneous rock, esp granite, formed from an intrusion of magma at great depth, esp one exposed after erosion of less resistant overlying rocks
batholith
- A large mass of igneous rock that has intruded and melted surrounding strata at great depths. Batholiths usually have a surface area of over 100 km 2 (38 mi 2).
Derived Forms
- 藢产补迟丑辞藞濒颈迟丑颈肠, adjective
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 产补迟丑顎卭路濒颈迟丑顎僫肠 adjective
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of batholith1
Example Sentences
Cornwall has a major advantage when it comes to alternative energy production: It sits atop a 280-million-year-old granite mass known as the Cornubian batholith, which is geologically ideal for producing geothermal energy.
The team鈥檚 research indicates the Spirit Lake batholith served as a plug in the Earth鈥檚 crust, diverting the magma.
Pink granite batholith circles Ensign Lake, and prehistoric 鈥渧olcano bombs鈥 鈥 chunks of rock blown off the side of a volcano 鈥 lie at the bottom of Kekekabic Lake.
Monazite, together with a small amount of gold, is also known in the stream gravels of the Boise Basin, Idaho, where a large granitic batholith evidently carries the mineral sparsely distributed throughout.
To capture that heat, water is pumped down from the surface through fissures in the batholith.
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