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See more results » (Definition ofcarbonatefrom theCambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary & Thesaurus© Cambridge University Press)- Some fishing is carried on: but the staple trade is the export of sand, which, being highly charged with carbonate of lime, is much used for manure.
- The carbonate of ammonia was dissolved in water and sprinkled over the growing wheat at three different times during the spring.
- The carbonate which is formed upon the charcoal, beyond the oxide, is of a bluish-white color.
- The principal mineral impurities of well and spring water are lime, magnesia, soda, and oxide of iron, combined with carbonic and sulphuric acids, forming carbonates, sulphates, and chloride of sodium, or common salt.
- With carbonate of soda it fuses with effervescence to a bead which spreads over the charcoal.
Examplesofcarbonatecarbonate She takes the broadest of views, including any discretecarbonatestructure with topographic relief formed by in situ or bound organic components.From theCambridge English Corpus There is also a general lack of seismic reflection horizons as a result of the uniformity of thecarbonatesuccession.From theCambridge English Corpus They are attached to the vein walls and embedded in carbonates just like the carbonaceous filaments.From theCambridge English Corpus These fluids emanate from giganticcarbonateedifices that can reach 60m in height.From theCambridge English Corpus Syn-kinematic, en-echelon tension gaps were filled bycarbonatematerial.From theCambridge English Corpus Possibly existing carbonates will form sulphates at their surfaces.From theCambridge English Corpus We present a record ofcarbonate-associated trace sulfate concentrations over the same time period.From theCambridge English Corpus The sabkhas are covered by a salt crust, 3-5 cm thick, under which there lies 25-150 cm ofcarbonatesand, gypsum and halite.From theCambridge English Corpus The second geological outcrop was partly covered by a crust of sulphate andcarbonateminerals.From theCambridge English Corpus Ichnofossils and ichnofabrics in rhythmically bedded pelagic/hemi-pelagic carbonates: recognition and evaluation of benthic redox and scour cycles.From theCambridge English Corpus Low-temperature, fine-grained, alteration products include serpentine, talc, bowlingite, white mica, epidote s. l.,carbonateand opaques.From theCambridge English Corpus Higher up in the sedimentary record, calcite becomes the most prominentcarbonatemineral.From theCambridge English Corpus Furthermore, volcanism coincided with prominent changes in local basin development, following collapse of thecarbonateplatform in this foreland basin.From theCambridge English Corpus True thickness of thecarbonatedeposits is unknown due to folding, but it certainly was in the order of hundreds of metres or more.From theCambridge English Corpus Occasional interbeds of fine-grainedcarbonatemay reflect gravity input of peri-platform ooze, rather than sea-floor preservation of calcium carbonate.From theCambridge English Corpus These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. #https://dictionary.cambridge.org//dictionary/english/carbonate## |