Lexicographical Neighbors of Diastrophically
Literary usage of Diastrophically
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Bulletin by Ohio State Geologist, Ohio Division of Geological Survey (1912)
"... lower part of the Huron) and ending with the top of the Cleveland shale,
constitute a single broadly conceived and diastrophically unbroken formation, ..."
2. Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences by Washington Academy of Sciences (1915)
"This crustal unrest is continued to the present, and the present is diastrophically
as well as climatically a part of the Pleistocene. ..."
3. Igneous Rocks and Their Origin by Reginald Aldworth Daly (1914)
"If the magma in the chamber were diastrophically pinched, we should expect, at
times, relatively enormous ..."