breccioid
English
Etymology
breccia + -oid
Adjective
breccioid (not comparable)
- Resembling breccia.
- 1846, Ebenezer Emmons, Agriculture of New-York: Soils, page 83:
- A coarse breccioid or large pebbly mass at the base.
- 1916, Johan August Udden, The Thrall Oil Field, volume 2, page 10:
- Above these shales we find a light, soft sandstone, sometimes of conglomeratic or breccioid structure, in moderately thick layers.
- 2007, Bernhard Hubmann, Fossil Corals and Sponges: Proceedings of the 9th International Symposium on Fossil Cnidaria and Porifera, Graz 2003:
- They are regarded as distal turbidites and are interbedded with bioclastic limestones and massive breccioid limestones containing blocks of coral colonies and intraclasts that are regarded as proximal turbidites.
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