Definition of Intrusives

1. Noun. (plural of intrusive) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Intrusives

1. intrusive [n] - See also: intrusive

Lexicographical Neighbors of Intrusives

intrunk
intrunked
intrunking
intrunks
intruse
intrusion
intrusional
intrusionist
intrusionists
intrusions
intrusive
intrusive r
intrusively
intrusiveness
intrusivenesses
intrusives (current term)
intrust
intrusted
intrusting
intrusts
ints
intubate
intubated
intubates
intubating
intubation
intubations
intubator
intuit
intuitable

Literary usage of Intrusives

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Bulletin by Mysore Geologists' Association (1918)
"In the pre-Cambrian rocks where the bedding and cleavage are nearly vertical, the intrusives take the form of dikes parallel to the bedding except where the ..."

2. Contributions to the Pre-Cambrian Geology of Northern Michigan and Wisconsin by Rolland Craten Allen, L. P. Barrett, Ermine Cowles Case, W. I. Robinson (1915)
"intrusives. The following discussion is applicable only in T 46 N, ... No other Huronian intrusives are known southwest of T 46 N, R 42 W, Michigan. ..."

3. Readers' Guide to Periodical Literature by Anna Lorraine Guthrie, Marion A. Knight, H.W. Wilson Company, Estella E. Painter (1920)
"Yale Rns 5:523-39 Ар '16 Gushing, Henry Platt Adirondack intrusives. J Geol 25:512-14 S '17 Structure of the ..."

4. Memoirs of the Geological Survey of India by Geological Survey of India (1902)
"(4) intrusives other than the charnockites. These include four series of intrusives, »*>.,— (a) Older basic. (6) Younger basic. (.•) Biotite granite. ..."

5. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences by New York Academy of Sciences (1916)
"The smaller intrusives are chiefly andesite porphyry in composition and have everywhere penetrated the shales and ash beds. The commonest occurrence is in ..."

6. Cecil County by Maryland Geological Survey, George Burbank Shattuck, Florence Bascom, Edward Bennett Mathews, Clarence Wilbur Dorsey, Jay Allan Bonsteel, Oliver Lanard Fassig, Henry Albert Pressey, Louis Agricola Bauer, Hugh M. Curran, George Bishop Sudworth, Geologic (1902)
"intrusives IN THE GABBRO BELT. The intrusives in the gabbro belt are of a more basic character than those in the granite-gneiss. One-fourth of a mile south ..."

7. Cecil County by Maryland Geological Survey (1902)
"intrusives IN THE GABBRO BELT. The intrusives in the gabbro belt are of a more basic character than those in the granite-gneiss. One-fourth of a mile south ..."

8. Petrology for Students: An Introduction to the Study of Rocks Under the by Alfred Harker (1897)
"ACID intrusives. THE acid intrusive rocks embrace a considerable range of varieties, bridging over the difference between the even-grained, ..."

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