¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Interlacustrine
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Interlacustrine
Literary usage of Interlacustrine
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Bulletin by Geological Society of America (1907)
"During a single prolonged interlacustrine epoch many minor variations of climate
appear to have taken place, so that the strata exhibit much variety. ..."
2. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1917)
"... and the irregular line separating the yellow and white sections does not stand
for a long interlacustrine epoch when the lake waters were completely ..."
3. The Geographical Journal by Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain). (1900)
"This region forms part of the great interlacustrine plateau, composed chiefly of
quartzite and clay-slates, which rises to a considerable height above the ..."
4. The American Geologist by Newton Horace Winchell (1891)
"... the interlacustrine epoch being attended probably with a nearly or quite
complete departure of the glaciers and ice-fields on the mountains. ..."
5. Manual of Geology: Practical and Theoretical by John Phillips (1855)
"These are referred by Brongniart to the interlacustrine marine beds of Paris,
but the shells as yet found in it are few. M. Studer, of Berne, ..."
6. Manual of Geology: Theoretical and Practical by John Phillips (1885)
"These were referred by Brongniart to the interlacustrine marine beds of Paris,
but the shells as yet found are few. M. Studer, of Berne, has amply described ..."
7. Annals of British Geology edited by John Frederick Blake (1891)
"... yet speaks of the planing down of the " interlacustrine land on which the
Triassic land-plants, reptiles, and mammals lived," as if the unconformity ..."