Lexicographical Neighbors of Eruptible
Literary usage of Eruptible
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Igneous Rocks and Their Origin by Reginald Aldworth Daly (1914)
"Yet. it cannot, of itself, prove the existence of independently eruptible granite
magma (luring the post-Keewatin period of the earth's ..."
2. The Journal of Geology by University of Chicago Department of Geology and Paleontology (1906)
"It regards the reservoirs as having no real existence as such, and as containing
no liquid eruptible contents until some source of heat acts upon them and ..."
3. Popular Science Monthly (1906)
"It regards the reservoirs as having no real existence as such, and as containing
no liquid eruptible ..."
4. The Physiography of the United States: Ten Monographs by National Geographic Society (U.S.), J. W. Powell (1896)
"... temperature is higher, and the rocks either in a molten condition or so hot
that when the pressure upon them is relieved they fuse and become eruptible. ..."
5. Bulletin of the Philosophical Society of Washington by Philosophical Society of Washington (1881)
"The theory must explain how materials which antecedently were inert, passive,
incapable of eruption, may become active, dynamical, eruptible. 2. ..."
6. Report on the Geology of the High Plateaus of Utah: With Atlas by Clarence Edward Dutton (1880)
"... would be in an eruptible condition. By a further increase of temperature ...
and trachyte would become eruptible, the former having passed the fusion ..."