culm$510614$ - vertaling naar italiaans
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culm$510614$ - vertaling naar italiaans

GEOLOGICAL FORMATION OF ENGLAND
The Culm (natural region); Culm Supergroup; Culm National Character Area; Culm measures
  • Boggy moorland near [[Hatherleigh]]

culm      
n. scorie di carbone; roccia contenente antracite impura (geol.); culmo, stello delle graminacee (bot.)
slag heap         
  • combustion.]]
  • Erosion clearly visible in the [[overburden]] left over from [[strip mining]] in [[Großräschen]], [[Germany]].
  • Spoil pile in [[Northumberland County, Pennsylvania]]
  • Spoil tip at Jägersfreude, [[Saarbrücken ]]
  • The spoil tip popularly known as "Monte Kali" or "Kalimanjaro", in [[Heringen]], [[Hesse]], [[Germany]].
  • Erosion clearly visible in this spoil tip called Kvarntorpshögen, in Kvarntorp, [[Närke]], [[Sweden]], in the 1970s
  • Spoil tips on the site Écopôle 11/19 in [[Loos-en-Gohelle]] (right). The town of [[Liévin]] is on the left (picture taken in 2005).
  • Spoil tips in winter in Donetsk, Ukraine. Nature is reclaiming the spoil tip in the foreground.
  • Spoil tip in [[Donetsk]], [[Ukraine]]
PILE BUILT OF ACCUMULATED SPOIL
Spoil heap; Boney piles; Bing (mining); Slag heap; Spoil bank; Gob pile; Tip (mining); Pit heap; Waste tip; Spoil tips; Waste heap
cumulo di scorie

Definitie

culm
n.
1.
Stalk (of corn, grasses, etc.), stem.
2.
Glance-coal, blind-coal, hard-coal, anthracite (in small particles).

Wikipedia

Culm Measures

The Culm Measures are a thick sequence of geological strata originating during the Carboniferous Period that occur in south-west England, principally in Devon and Cornwall, now known as the Culm Supergroup. Its estimated thickness varies between 3600 m and 4750 m though intense folding complicates it at outcrop. They are so called because of the occasional presence in the Barnstaple–Hartland area of a soft, often lenticular, sooty coal, which is known in Devon as culm. The word culm may be derived from the Old English word for coal col or from the Welsh word cwlwm meaning knot (due to the folding of the beds in which the coal is found).

Most of the succession consists of shales and thin sandstones, but there are also occurrences of slate, limestone and chert.

Culm grassland on the formation's slates and shales is composed of purple moor grass and rush pasture. It is noted for a wide diversity of species, some extremely rare including the marsh fritillary butterfly. Some 92 percent of Culm grassland has been lost in the past 100 years, 48 percent being lost between 1984 and 1991 alone. There are a number of organisations trying to halt the decline including Devon Wildlife Trust with its Culm Natural Networks project, Butterfly Conservation, and Natural England with its Environmental Stewardship Scheme.

Culm soils have traditionally been used for grazing as they are heavy to work and acidic.