stylolite

  • 1stylolite — [stī′lə līt΄] n. [stylo < Gr stylos (see STYLITE) + LITE] a small, columnlike formation in a rock deposit, usually composed of limestone with grooved or scratched sides …

    English World dictionary

  • 2Stylolite — ), or dark organic matter.The term stylolite is derived from the Greek for pillar, stylo . Compare the French stylo for pencil, and stylite for pillar saint , an ascetic deliberately living standing on top of a pillar.A stylolite is not a… …

    Wikipedia

  • 3stylolite — ● stylolithe ou stylolite nom masculin Dans les roches calcaires, figures en forme de pics soulignés par des traces d oxydes, résultant d une dissolution sous contrainte des carbonates …

    Encyclopédie Universelle

  • 4stylolite — /ˈstaɪləlaɪt/ (say stuyluhluyt) adjective 1. of or relating to a column like structure found in certain limestones, the columns having grooved sides and being composed of limestone and generally at right angles or highly inclined to the bedding… …

  • 5stylolite — stylolitic /stuy leuh lit ik/, adj. /stuy leuh luyt /, n. Geol. an irregular columnar structure in certain limestones, the columns being approximately at right angles to the bedding planes. [1865 70; STYLO 2 + LITE] * * * Sedimentary structure… …

    Universalium

  • 6stylolite — noun An irregular surface between strata consisting of toothlike projections; most common in limestone and dolomite …

    Wiktionary

  • 7stylolite —    An irregular suture like boundary developed along some bedding planes in limestones, probably caused by dissolution under pressure and possibly related in some cases to subsequent inception of speleogenesis [9 [ …

    Lexicon of Cave and Karst Terminology

  • 8stylolite — sty·lo·lite …

    English syllables

  • 9stylolite — …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 10Pressure solution — or pressure dissolution in structural geology and diagenesis is a deformation mechanism that involves the dissolution of minerals at grain to grain contacts into an aqueous pore fluid in areas of relatively high stress and either deposition in… …

    Wikipedia