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  2. Deposition (phase transition) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deposition_(phase_transition)

    Water vapour from humid winter-air deposits directly into a solid, crystalline frost pattern on a window, without ever being liquid in the process.. Deposition is the phase transition in which gas transforms into solid without passing through the liquid phase.

  3. Batholith - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batholith

    Half Dome, a quartz monzonite monolith in Yosemite National Park and part of the Sierra Nevada Batholith. A batholith (from Ancient Greek bathos 'depth' and lithos 'rock') is a large mass of intrusive igneous rock (also called plutonic rock), larger than 100 km 2 (40 sq mi) in area, [1] that forms from cooled magma deep in the Earth's crust.

  4. Glen Coe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glen_Coe

    Coire nan Lochan, a corrie of Bidean nam Bian on the southern side of Glen Coe Glencoe by Hugh William Williams, c. 1825–1829. The glen is U-shaped, formed by an ice age glacier, [9] about 12.5 kilometres (7 + 3 ⁄ 4 mi) long with the floor of the glen being less than 700 metres (3 ⁄ 8 mi) wide, narrowing sharply at the "Pass of Glen Coe".

  5. Glencoe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glencoe

    Glencoe was a place name used by Scottish immigrants to name several places in the world. It may also refer to: Glen Coe, Lochaber, Highland, Scotland

  6. Glencoe Baobab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glencoe_Baobab

    Glencoe Baobab is the stoutest and second largest baobab (Adansonia digitata L.) after the Sagole Baobab [1] in South Africa. It is possibly the stoutest tree in the world. The Champion Tree is located in Glencoe Farm, near Hoedspruit, Limpopo and had a trunk diameter of 15.9 m (52 ft). The tree divides into several trunks close to the ground.

  7. Henderson Stone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henderson_Stone

    John Prebble, in Glencoe: the story of the massacre, analyzes the significance of the stories of the warnings at Henderson Stone in this way: The Campbells of Argyll’s Regiment were Highland, and the inviolability of hospitality was as sacred to them as to any other clan, murder under trust was as great a sin.