druse

See also: Druse and Drüse

English

Etymology

Compare German Druse (crystallized piece of ore), and English dross.

Noun

druse (plural druses or drusen)

  1. (mineralogy) An inner surface with a crust of tiny crystals.
    • 1889, Dana et al, A System of Mineralogy:
      Occurs as a fine coating over the minerals in druses or cavities in the granite.
    • 1969, T. R. Meyers, The Geology of New Hampshire: Minerals and mines, page 18:
      Nontronite, a variety of chloropal occurs as a light yellow powder in druses of the North Conway granite (99, p. 312).
    • 1984, Science Reports of the Tohoku University:
      A lot of druses are found in the vein, and euhedral crystals of quartz, marcasite and sphalerite are observed as druse minerals.
  2. (botany) An aggregation of calcium oxalate crystals found in certain plants.
  3. (ophthalmology) A tiny yellow or white accumulation of extracellular material that builds up in Bruch's membrane of the eye.

Derived terms

Translations

Anagrams


Italian

Noun

druse f

  1. plural of drusa
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.