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stalagmite
[ stuh-lag-mahyt, stal-uhg-mahyt ]
noun
- a deposit, usually of calcium carbonate, more or less resembling an inverted stalactite, formed on the floor of a cave or the like by the dripping of percolating calcareous water.
stalagmite
/ ˈstæləɡˌmaɪt; ˌstæləɡˈmɪtɪk /
noun
- a cylindrical mass of calcium carbonate projecting upwards from the floor of a limestone cave: formed by precipitation from continually dripping water Compare stalactite
stalagmite
/ stə-lăg′mīt′ /
- A cylindrical or conical mineral deposit, similar to a stalactite but built up from the floor of a cave or cavern. Stalagmites are typically broader than stalactites. The two formations are often, but not always, paired, and they sometimes join at a midpoint to form a pillar.
- Compare stalactite
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Derived Forms
- stalagmitic, adjective
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Other Words From
- stal·ag·mit·ic [stal-, uh, g-, mit, -ik], stalag·miti·cal adjective
- stalag·miti·cal·ly adverb
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Word History and Origins
Origin of stalagmite1
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Word History and Origins
Origin of stalagmite1
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Example Sentences
These were frequently buried beneath deposits of stalagmite and other materials that must have taken a long time to accumulate.
Stalagmite with a few bones and antlers of reindeer, the thickness varying from one to fifteen inches.
The evidences from peat bogs, stalagmite formations, stone, iron and bronze tools are all now considered unreliable by scientists.
Slow water fell drop by drop from the point of the stalactite upon the point of the stalagmite.
This stalagmite is much deeper in colour and less translucent than the onyx marbles of Algeria and Mexico.
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