cirque

[surk] /sɜrk/
noun
1.
circle; ring.
2.
a bowl-shaped, steep-walled mountain basin carved by glaciation, often containing a small, round lake.
Origin
1595-1605; < French < Latin circus; see circus
Examples from the web for cirque
  • Others simply relax in the sun-washed glacial cirque and bask in the presence of the peak.
  • cirque serves up this kind of thing as an appetizer, not the main course.
  • Often a terminal, or end, moraine marking the foot of a cirque dams a small mountain lake called a tarn.
  • cirque glaciers are usually the remnants of much larger valley glaciers.
  • It has a good elevation range which extends from the cirque floor to, in one section, the surrounding ridge top.
  • During both glaciations coverage was confined mainly to upper valley channels and cirque basins, leaving many areas ice-free.
British Dictionary definitions for cirque

cirque

/sɜːk/
noun
1.
Also called corrie, cwm. a semicircular or crescent-shaped basin with steep sides and a gently sloping floor formed in mountainous regions by the erosive action of a glacier
2.
(archaeol) an obsolete term for circle (sense 11)
3.
(poetic) a circle, circlet, or ring
Word Origin
C17: from French, from Latin circus ring, circle, circus
Word Origin and History for cirque
n.

c.1600, "a circus," from French cirque (14c.), from Latin circus (see circus). Cf. Italian and Spanish circo.

cirque in Science
cirque
  (sûrk)   
A steep, amphitheatre-shaped hollow occurring at the upper end of a mountain valley, especially one forming the head of a glacier or stream. Cirques are formed by the erosive activity of glaciers and often contain a small lake.
Encyclopedia Article for cirque

(French: "circle"), amphitheatre-shaped basin with precipitous walls, at the head of a glacial valley. It generally results from erosion beneath the bergschrund of a glacier. A bergschrund is a large crevasse that lies a short distance from the exposed rock walls and separates the stationary from the moving ice; in early summer it opens, exposing the rock at its base to diurnal changes of temperature. Frost action then causes rapid disintegration of lower rock, which causes the upper rock to avalanche and produce an almost vertical head wall. Resulting rock material is embedded in the glacier and scours a concave floor, which may contain a small lake (tarn) if the glacier disappears. Expansion of neighbouring cirques produces sharp aretes, cols, and horns. Because glaciers must originate above the snowline, a survey of the elevations of ancient cirques provides information on climatic change and on the former position of the snow line.

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