What's the difference between outcrop and striation?

Outcrop


Definition:

  • (n.) The coming out of a stratum to the surface of the ground.
  • (n.) That part of inclined strata which appears at the surface; basset.
  • (v. i.) To come out to the surface of the ground; -- said of strata.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The Private Islands Online website, which specialises in selling island paradises and rocky outcrops across the world, says a little bit of land surrounded by sea in the Cyclades or Dodecanese is the perfect trophy asset: "Greek islands are the ultimate status symbol, evoking images of sunglass-sporting shipping magnates sipping champagne on the deck of enormous yachts."
  • (2) A rocky outcrop on the edge of the continent, now called the Point Lobos state reserve, it is a beautifully elemental place that remains much as it was in Weston's time.
  • (3) Both Bishop and Shorten said operational details of freedom-of-navigation exercises were a matter for the military, and did not call for such operations within 12 nautical miles of Chinese rock outcrops or artificial islands.
  • (4) • enjoythecoast.it Plage de Bon Secours, Saint-Malo, France Facebook Twitter Pinterest On calm days, there is a striking contrast between the mirror-like surface of Saint-Malo sea pool and the ruffled sea beyond, between the order of its geometric walls and the random rocky outcrops behind them.
  • (5) So that’s what I did: I decided that this would no longer be just a rocky outcrop on the port of Funchal, it would be my island, about the size of a one-bedroom house.
  • (6) His destination was the large outcrop of copper-bearing strata in the mountains above the village of Mes Aynak.
  • (7) This rocky outcrop sees hundreds of visitors daily, in good weather and bad, and thousands of swimmers on Christmas Day.
  • (8) Stretching north of Punta del Este, the landscape and atmosphere of the Uruguayan coast changes swiftly and dramatically - huge swathes of empty beach, boutique hideaways on isolated outcrops, candlelit hippie towns and tiny fishing villages.
  • (9) It is one of the rocky outcrops overlooking the bucolic valley of Qunu, where South Africa's first black president grew up and which, at 93, he still calls home.
  • (10) At its margin abutting the central fibrous body the atrioventricular (A-V) node exhibited numerous fronds and outcroppings, some forming loop connections from one part of A-V node to another.
  • (11) The three-mile loop overlooks the blue-tinged fossil-rich outcrop where many of John Day’s fossils have been found.
  • (12) But new research about to be published suggests that over the decades they may have been chipping away at the wrong rocky outcrop on the Preseli Hills in Pembrokeshire .
  • (13) Plans to build the UK's first geothermal plant that would use heat from granite outcrops beneath the Earth's surface to power a small town were unveiled today.
  • (14) They made it clear that these “motherfucker refugees” were not welcome on the charmless rocky outcrop.
  • (15) In north-east Corsica, asbestos outcrops are a source of environmental pollution, as assessed by airborne concentrations of chrysotile and tremolite that are significantly higher in the north-east than the north-west.
  • (16) Known in China as the Diaoyu Islands, this small collection of islets and rocky outcroppings in the East China Sea has lain outside of direct Chinese control since 1895.
  • (17) Parking is near the elegiac ruins of Tintern Abbey, and from there one embarks upon a digestible but heart thumping climb up to the Devil's Pulpit, a rocky outcrop, affording fantastic views, where the evil doer himself supposedly used to preach temptation to the industrious monks scurrying below.
  • (18) Dunvegan Castle and Gardens Clinging to a rocky outcrop, Dunvegan Castle has been the MacLeod stronghold for eight centuries.
  • (19) On the other side, the vegetation opened up again and the slope led down towards a small outcrop wreathed with pine trees.
  • (20) Calm and controlled, he stood on an outcrop barely 7m from where I was standing, his gaze locked on the swimmers.

Striation


Definition:

  • (n.) The quality or condition of being striated.
  • (n.) A stria; as, the striations on a shell.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) We show that over a limited range of high spatial frequencies this noise takes on a striated appearance, with the striations running perpendicular to the true fringe orientation.
  • (2) Cytoplasmic striations seen by light microscopy and trilamellar inclusions seen by electron microscopy were found in ballooned adrenocortical cells.
  • (3) In addition the bare central backbone showed transverse striations.
  • (4) These vacuoles contained one or several typical collagen fibrils and had either an electron-lucent matrix or contained an electron-dense material obscuring the fibrillar outlines and cross-striations.
  • (5) A new optical-electronic method has been developed to detect striation spacing of single muscle fibers.
  • (6) Fungiform papillae which had a round depression on the top were distributed sporadically among the filiform papillae, and contained columnar CTC with several plane striations running longitudinally along the lateral surface.
  • (7) Often juxtaposing sets of striations are not in correct register with respect to one another.
  • (8) In the Colobinae striations are oriented in a predominantly mesiodistal direction.
  • (9) Superficial corneal epithelial striations described as fibrillary lines have been documented as a common finding in normal and keratoconic eyes.
  • (10) A characteristic 67 nm transverse striation produced by the intermixing of tropocollagen and collagen types 1 and 3 is observed.
  • (11) These masses were classified into three broad categories: centrally necrotic masses with a large predominantly liquefactive center and higher density periphery (29); multilocular, septated masses with distinct linear bands or striations (21); and miscellaneous masses (9).
  • (12) These transition cells possessed apical granules of variable size as well as prominent basal striations.
  • (13) Amino acid composition, cross striation banding as observed using electron microscopy, cyanogen bromide peptide patterns in disc electrophoresis gels and resistance of the disulfide regions to pepsin digestion indicated a close similarity to previously described insoluble type III collagen, which was solubilized by limited pepsin digestion.
  • (14) Rabbits were trained to discriminate between vertical and horizontal striations.
  • (15) These structures were labelled with a selective antibody and showed regular periodic striation with repeats of approximately 40 nm.
  • (16) Sometimes, these seemed to be connected with the wall of the intracristal space by fine, electron-dense cross-striations.
  • (17) In the angiograms, the highly vascular region displays a certain striation which is due to the presence of muscle fiber bundles running between the pathologic vessels.
  • (18) However, in the clinical setting of acute cholecystitis, the presence of striations suggests gangrenous changes in the gallbladder.
  • (19) A- and I-band striation positions have been obtained, three-dimensionally reconstructed, and statistically analyzed from the volumes of resting isolated heart cells.
  • (20) Striation of the cuticle cells was normal, with wearing of their free borders (PL, SEM; fig.