Utiliser "basalt" dans une phrase
basalt exemples de phrases
basalt
1. Down on the far end of Khume Lvataiya from Khiynian Well the foundation blocks give way to haphazard lumps of the original postpile basalt far beneath Visyaign Technological University
2. Waves crashed onto the basalt, and then
3. the world's only known "impact" crater in basalt
4. basalt glass spherules that have been found
5. “Even more so when you consider the walls are built out of basalt
6. I think to comment, “maybe the basalt stones were small and picked
7. Gas pockets in the basalt flows in
8. It was beautiful to see the mountain and its columns of basalt facing me, sprinkled with a rather heavy dusting of snow
9. I spotted him standing on a chunk of basalt
10. I was less wonder-struck the next day as I walked over McKenzie Pass into the Mount Washington Wilderness, and the trail became rockier still as I crossed the basalt flows of Belknap Crater and Little Belknap
11. Half a cubic meter of basalt weighs about that much (more or less)
12. Under pale blue skies, he drove along the base of high, sheer basalt cliffs
13. Like the stadium, most were being clad with natural stone, all of it German—more limestone from Franconia, basalt from the Eifel hills, granite and marble from Silesia, travertine from Thuringia, porphyry from Saxony
14. a wall of broken basalt which extended to the ceiling
15. They were all on the one stratum, hollowed out of some soft rock which lay between the volcanic basalt forming the ruddy cliffs above them, and the hard granite which formed their base
16. He brought out a lump of basalt of a considerable size, constructed in the middle so that a cord could be easily attached to it
17. Then the lump of basalt was fastened to the thongs, and the rope was allowed to hang from the end of it, being passed three times round the Professor's arm
18. When we were able to stagger to our feet we saw far off in the deep blue sky one dark spot where the lump of basalt was speeding upon its way
19. The country around Edinburgh is extremely interesting to the geologist, and presents numerous instances of the junction of rocks to which the advocates of the Neptunian system have referred in support of their opinion as to the aqueous origin of greenstone, basalt, and wacke; while the same examples have been cited by the Volcanists, and by those who hold an intermediate opinion
20. Other eminences are composed of amygdaloid, claystone, and other porphyries; and basalt and trap tuff occur in an overlying position