namakier
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Blend of Persian نمک (namak, “salt”) + glacier. First use appears c. 1970. See cite below.
Noun
[edit]namakier (plural namakiers)
- Synonym of salt glacier
- 1970, University of Texas, Bureau of Economic Geology (contributor), Report of Investigations - Issues 142-146, page 18:
- Namakiers represent large, recumbent sheath folds underlain and flanked by rigid bedrock and overlain by air.
- 1987, Munn & Company (contributor), Scientific American - Volume 257, page 79:
- Hence the namakier consists of a stack of overlapping tongues.
- 1998, Andrew C. Scott, Derek John Blundell (editors), Lyell - The Past is the Key to the Present, page 320:
- Most salt extrusions rising on high ground are asymmetric and feed only one namakier.
- 2006, John K. Warren, Evaporites: Sediments, Resources and Hydrocarbons, page 471:
- Small ephemeral features, including shallow caves, are typical of the salt glacier surface, but in an active namakier the salt is flowing too fast to preserve them.
- 2022, Marcia Bjornerud, Geopedia - A Brief Compendium of Geologic Curiosities, page 95:
- From Farsi for "mountain of salt," a namakier is perhaps more accurately described as a glacier of salt that can flow over the land surface as fast as inches per year, rivaling its icy counterparts for speed.