esker

English

An esker

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Irish eiscir (esker, glacial ridge).

Pronunciation

Noun

esker (plural eskers)

  1. A long, narrow, sinuous ridge created by deposits from a stream running beneath a glacier.
    • 1988, Robert Phillip Sharp, Living Ice: Understanding Glaciers and Glaciation, page 149,
      Another unusual ice-contact feature is an esker, a long, narrow, steep-sided ridge of glaciofluvial sand and gravel inhabiting a glaciated area. Eskers tend to follow valleys and lowlands, carefully picking a course between obstacles.
    • 1999, L. Clayton, J. W. Attig, D. M. Mickelson, Tunnel channels formed in Wisconsin during the last glaciation, David M. Mickelson, John W. Attig (editors), Glacial Processes, Past and Present, page 77,
      Another objection to the tunnel-valley interpretation comes from a comparison with eskers. [] The esker rivers and the tunnel-channel rivers of Wisconsin therefore seem to have been the result of significantly different meltwater regimes.
    • 2001, Allan D. Randall, Hydrogeologic Framework of Stratified-drift Aquifers in the Glaciated Northeastern United States, US Geological Survey Paper 1415-B, page B37,
      The multiple deltas must have formed sequentially, which led Thompson (1982) to conclude that the eskers were built in successive segments.

Synonyms

Translations

Anagrams


Basque

Noun

esker

  1. gratitude, thankfulness
  2. benefit
  3. merit

Declension

Derived terms


Norwegian Bokmål

Noun

esker m or f

  1. indefinite plural of eske

Norwegian Nynorsk

Noun

esker f

  1. indefinite plural of eske

Zazaki

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ɛsˈkɛɾ]
  • Hyphenation: es‧ker

Etymology

From Arabic عَسْكَر (ʿaskar, army), from Persian لشکر (laškar, army).

Noun

esker m

  1. soldier

Derived terms

  • eskeriye

See also

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