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- EBURNEAN Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of EBURNEAN is resembling ivory in color
- Eburnean orogeny - Wikipedia
The Eburnean orogeny, or Eburnean cycle, was a series of tectonic, metamorphic and plutonic events in what is now West Africa during the Paleoproterozoic era about 2200–2000 million years ago During this period the Birimian domain in West Africa was established and structured
- Eburnean - Wikipedia
Eburnean means made of, or relating to ivory Other uses: Eburnean orogeny, a series of major tectonic events around 2100 Ma; Eburnean Democratic Bloc, a splinter group of the Democratic Party of Côte d'Ivoire formed in 1949
- EBURNEAN definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
Having a construction of ivory or like ivory in terms of colour and texture Click for English pronunciations, examples sentences, video
- What does eburnean mean? - Definitions. net
Definition of eburnean in the Definitions net dictionary Meaning of eburnean What does eburnean mean? Information and translations of eburnean in the most comprehensive dictionary definitions resource on the web
- eburnean | eburnian adjective - Oxford English Dictionary
What does the adjective eburnean mean? There is one meaning in OED's entry for the adjective eburnean See ‘Meaning use’ for definition, usage, and quotation evidence
- Eburnean - definition of eburnean by The Free Dictionary
Define eburnean eburnean synonyms, eburnean pronunciation, eburnean translation, English dictionary definition of eburnean or adj having a construction of ivory or like ivory in terms of colour and texture Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 ©
- The 2-Ga Eburnean Orogeny in Gabon and the opening of the Francevillian . . .
The Eburnean orogeny in Africa results from the continental collision between the San Francisco and Congolian cratons The different stages of this orogeny in Gabon are described from the initial rifting of the Archean continent with the crustal melting producing pre-Eburnean migmatites at 2450 Ma, the opening of an ocean
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