¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Denudations
1. denudation [n] - See also: denudation
Lexicographical Neighbors of Denudations
Literary usage of Denudations
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Coal-regions of America: Their Topography, Geology, and Development by James Macfarlane (1873)
"denudations. ing only the highest knobs on the highest mountains, ... denudations.—But
the topography of this whole coalfield is only in some localities ..."
2. An Introduction to Geology: Intended to Convey a Practical Knowledge of the by Robert Bakewell, Benjamin Silliman (1839)
"ON THE FORMATION OF VALLEYS, AND THE GEOLOGICAL THEORIES RELATING TO VALLEYS AND
denudations. On the Causes that have broken the Surface of the Globe. ..."
3. A text-book of mental diseases: with special reference to the pathological by William Bevan Lewis (1899)
"Uniform and Partial denudations—Defective Control—The Neurotic and Criminal ...
It is by these partial denudations that we seek to explain the incongruous ..."
4. Natural History of New York by New York (State). Natural History Survey, James Ellsworth De Kay (1842)
"Embracing excavations or denudations, valleys; lakes; scratches upon rocks ...
Reversing the order in which the excavations or denudations have been made as ..."
5. A Text-book of mental diseases: With Special Reference to the Pathological by William Bevan Lewis (1890)
"It is by these partial denudations that we seek to explain the incongruous results
of the diseased process and the overbalance of faculties so ..."
6. An Introduction to Geology: Comprising the Elements of the Science in Its by Robert Bakewell, Benjamin Silliman (1829)
"DELUGES, AND denudations. THERE are few subjects on which the opinions of geologists
have been more divided, than the formation of vallies. ..."
7. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General by Thomas Spencer Baynes (1890)
"... have been exposed to a complicated series of disturbances and denudations,
with, as a result, the removal from some areas of a thickness of strata above ..."