skiffer

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English

Etymology

Presumably Swedish skiffer.

Noun

skiffer (plural skiffer)

  1. (geology, paleontology, possibly obsolete) Slate.
    • 1905, Norges geologiske undersøkelse, NGU:
      It presents the obverve aspect, and this is well marked and characteristic. Range. D. gibberulus is a common species in the Upper Phyllograptus-skiffer of Scania, and in the Middle Arenig beds of Britain, underlying the zone of D. bifidus.
    • 1906, The Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London, Geological Society of London, page 696:
      ... and the Cyrtograptus - Skiffer of Scania. The Rastrites - Skiffer have been divided by Prof. Törnquist into six zones; and the assemblage of species of each of these agrees closely with that of the five zones of our Llandovery Series, and with ...
    • 1914, Vickers Oberholtzer, The Rocks of Oland, Geologically Considered, page 9:
      Moberg reports finding in the Dictyonema shales the trilobites, Ceratopyge forficula and Shumardia pusilla which have also been found in the Ceratopyge skiffer of Norway, [] the only species of trilobite as yet found in the Dictyonema skiffer of Sweden proper;
    • 2014, Charles Francis Hall, Narrative of the Second Arctic Expedition Made by Charles F. Hall, Cambridge University Press (→ISBN), page 582:
      The occurrence of this common Utica slate species so far north is interesting, and, taken with its appearance in the Trinuclid Skiffer of Sweden (Linnarsson, loc. cit, p. 70, fig. 27), where it is also of the same small size as here, gives it a wide

Swedish

Swedish Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia sv

Etymology

Borrowed from German Schiefer.

Pronunciation

Noun

skiffer c

  1. (geology) slate

Declension

Derived terms

References