Lexicographical Neighbors of Fluidally
Literary usage of Fluidally
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1897)
"The earth must gradually yield fluidally or plastically until static equilibrium
is established or nearly so. Thus continuous transfer of material from one ..."
2. Structural and Field Geology for Students of Pure and Applied Science by James Geikie (1905)
"Under the microscope the groundmass is seen to consist of lath-like microlites
and crystals of plagioclase, usually fluidally arranged, with minute granules ..."
3. Structural and Field Geology for Students of Pure and Applied Science by James Geikie (1905)
"Under the microscope the groundmass is seen to consist of lath-like microlites
and crystals of plagioclase, usually fluidally arranged, with minute granules ..."
4. The Gases in Rocks by Rollin Thomas Chamberlin (1908)
"It is difficult to understand how an earth could be possessed of this ability,
if it yielded fluidally to such transient and moderate stresses as those of ..."
5. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria by Royal Society of Victoria (Melbourne, Vic.), Royal Society of Victoria (1901)
"The base is full of fluidally arranged felspar laths, which are either simply or
repeatedly twinned. ..."
6. The Roman Comagmatic Region by Henry Stephens Washington (1906)
"... laths of feldspar, here mostly soda-orthoclase, with less labradorite, these
being arranged fluidally, so that the fabric is a typical trachytic one. ..."
7. The Tidal and Other Problems by Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin, Forest Ray Moulton, Charles Sumner Slichter, William Duncan MacMillan, Arthur Constant Lunn, Julius Stieglitz (1909)
"It is difficult to understand how an earth could be possessed of this ability,
if it yielded fluidally to such transient and moderate stresses as those of ..."