Lexicographical Neighbors of Septarian
Literary usage of Septarian
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Stones for Building and Decoration by George Perkins Merrill (1908)
"Like rhodochrosite rhodonite is stated to change color on prolonged exposure.
septarian No'dules.—The peculiar concretionary forms of impure carbonate of ..."
2. Stones for Building and Decoration by George Perkins Merrill (1903)
"Like rhodochrosite rhodonite is stated to change color on prolonged exposure.
septarian Nodules.—The peculiar concretionary forms of impure carbonate of ..."
3. Text-book of Geology by Archibald Geikie (1885)
".Such septarian nodules, whether composed of clay-ironstone or limestone, aro
abundant in many shales, as in the Carboniferous and Liassic series of England ..."
4. Transactions of the Manchester Geological Society by Manchester Geological Society (1895)
"... WATTS exhibited a curious septarian nodule which, he said, was one of a number
of things that he had been fortunate enough to find in the boulder clay ..."
5. Notes on Illinois Bituminous Shales, Including Results of Their Experimental by Nellie Okla Barrett (1922)
"4, T. 5 N., R. 3 E., as shown in figure 37. Above the septarian limestone layer
at this Fio. 37. View of No. 2 coal and the overlying shale exposed between ..."