Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q1259180> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 25 of
25
with 100 triples per page.
- Q1259180 subject Q7037629.
- Q1259180 subject Q7239874.
- Q1259180 subject Q8571082.
- Q1259180 subject Q9238416.
- Q1259180 abstract "Suffosion is one of the two geological processes by which subsidence sinkholes or dolines are formed, the other being due to collapse of an underlying cave or void, with most sinkholes formed by the suffosion process. Suffosion sinkholes are normally associated with karst topography although they may form in other types of rock including chalk, gypsum and basalt. In the karst of the UK's Yorkshire Dales, numerous surface depressions known locally as "shakeholes", are the result of glacial till washing into fissures in the underlying limestone.".
- Q1259180 thumbnail SuffosionSinkholeFormation.jpg?width=300.
- Q1259180 wikiPageWikiLink Q1069.
- Q1259180 wikiPageWikiLink Q16817.
- Q1259180 wikiPageWikiLink Q183670.
- Q1259180 wikiPageWikiLink Q188734.
- Q1259180 wikiPageWikiLink Q22723.
- Q1259180 wikiPageWikiLink Q2693076.
- Q1259180 wikiPageWikiLink Q35509.
- Q1259180 wikiPageWikiLink Q427711.
- Q1259180 wikiPageWikiLink Q43338.
- Q1259180 wikiPageWikiLink Q7037629.
- Q1259180 wikiPageWikiLink Q7239874.
- Q1259180 wikiPageWikiLink Q82658.
- Q1259180 wikiPageWikiLink Q849953.
- Q1259180 wikiPageWikiLink Q8571082.
- Q1259180 wikiPageWikiLink Q9238416.
- Q1259180 wikiPageWikiLink Q977613.
- Q1259180 comment "Suffosion is one of the two geological processes by which subsidence sinkholes or dolines are formed, the other being due to collapse of an underlying cave or void, with most sinkholes formed by the suffosion process. Suffosion sinkholes are normally associated with karst topography although they may form in other types of rock including chalk, gypsum and basalt.".
- Q1259180 label "Suffosion".
- Q1259180 depiction SuffosionSinkholeFormation.jpg.