intercanyon
English
Etymology
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˌɪn.tɚˈkæn.jən/
- enPR: ĭnʹtər-kănʹyən
- Hyphenation: in‧ter‧can‧yon
Adjective
intercanyon (not comparable)
- (geology, geography) Situated or occurring between two or more canyons.
- 1926 Dec, William H. Haas, “The Cliff-Dweller and His Habitat”, in Annals of the Association of American Geographers, volume 16, number 4, page 201:
- Many small intercanyon areas have thus been entirely isolated from the surrounding territory and stand out prominently from the canyons below as flat-topped mountains.
- 2023, David C. Mosher, Mary-Lynn Dickson, John Shimeld, H. Ruth Jackson, Gordon N. Oakey, Kai Boggild, D. Calvin Campbell, Paola Travaglini, Walta-Anne Rainey, Alain Murphy, Sonya Dehler, John Ells, “Canada’s maritime frontier: the science legacy of Canada’s extended continental shelf mapping for UNCLOS.”, in Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, volume 60, number 1, pages 15-16:
- While there are canyons and intercanyon areas in which turbidity current and sediment mass failure deposits dominate, much of the deep-water margin was heavily influenced by contour current deposition.
Noun
intercanyon (plural intercanyons)
- A tract of land, ridge, or terrain that lies between two or more canyons.