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Definitions

alluvium

[uh-loo-vee-uhm] / əˈlu vi əm /




Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Deposits of alluvium and volcanic ash have made desirable soil that is among the top 2% in the world.

From Seattle Times • Jun. 16, 2023

Paved surfaces end miles from the rock outcrop, so we drive on overgrown rutted two-tracks that cross the loose sandy dune fields that show up on our geologic maps as “QAL”—Quaternary alluvium.

From Scientific American • Dec. 15, 2020

Thus, a landscape architect I know savors the very smell of the dirt embedded in his botany texts; it is the alluvium of his life’s work.

From Slate • Feb. 4, 2020

The island’s geology — a heart of granite in the west, compacted alluvium in the east — is such that most of it could be hollowed out.

From New York Times • Apr. 20, 2017

V. Lastly, the mangrove forest in like manner may be roughly estimated at 5⁄100 of the superficial area, and is a swampy soil, unfitted for cultivation, consisting of salt-water marshes, and alluvium, moistened by salt-water.

From Narrative of the Circumnavigation of the Globe by the Austrian Frigate Novara, Volume II (Commodore B. Von Wullerstorf-Urbair,) Undertaken by Order of the Imperial Government in the Years 1857, 1858, & 1859, Under the Immediate Auspices of His I. and R. Highness the Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian, Commander-In-Chief of the Austrian Navy. by Scherzer, Karl Ritter von




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