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escarp

NOUN
  1. a steep artificial slope in front of a fortification

How To Use escarp In A Sentence

  • Once the more resistant gently dipping rocks of the Cotswolds have been removed, the underlying softer beds are easily eroded, so the Jurassic escarpments to the east of the Vales of Evesham and Gloucester retreated through time.
  • The escarpments, however, are due in a large degree to the erosion of weaker rock on the downthrow side. The Elements of Geology
  • The escarpment has been shaped into numerous irregularities, indentations, and promontories, and is pierced by thalweg ravines, gorges, and rocky passages connecting the plain and plateau. Cliffs of Bandiagara (Land of the Dogons), Mali
  • Legend has it that the lammergeier will sometimes dive at animals, even humans, trying to scare them into falling off the escarpment.
  • Everything was bone dry, and the cedar breaks below the escarpment held not a single robin, waxwing, solitaire, or bluebird.
  • Heavy rains extended south to the Illawarra escarpment west of Wollongong, an area accustomed to drenchings from east coast lows.
  • It was like an escarpment, sloping up gently on one side and dropping vertically to 90m on the other.
  • Surrounding the pans on a larger scale (on less brackish soil) are grasslands dominated by Odyssea paucinervis and Cynodon dactylon with Cenchrus ciliaris and Eriochloa meyeriana dominating the crests of calcrete escarpments. Zambezian halophytics
  • In the deep escarped valleys between San Fiorenzo and the tower of Rambles in the Islands of Corsica and Sardinia with Notices of their History, Antiquities, and Present Condition.
  • The mixed mesophytic forest is restricted mostly to the deeper ravines and escarpment slopes, and the upland forests are dominated by mixed oaks with shortleaf pine. Ecoregions of Tennessee (EPA)
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