1. coring - Noun
2. coring - Verb
of Core
Source: Webster's dictionaryPeople walking around the ice covered Artic Ocean are dwarfed by the Swedish coring vessel Vidar Viking during a trip in this undated handout photo. Source: Internet
Researchers aboard the ship dropped box-shaped coring devices 12,000 feet to the seafloor to sample the nodules as well as bring up sediments and mud from the seafloor. Source: Internet
The line refers to the project’s main goal of reconstructing Antarctica’s past environment by coring and recovering sediments from the continent’s margin to help predict how the continent’s ice sheets might respond to future environmental changes. Source: Internet
SCINI could play a pivotal role in the final drilling operation, which will likely involve coring into one site on the seafloor for as long as technically feasible. Source: Internet
Such records are hard to obtain in the continental margin where the WISSARD team will core because of the hard glacial till that resists traditional coring techniques, according to Powell. Source: Internet
We have since recently been aware that in addition to regular seismic surveys, KMG has also performed a drop coring program, taking samples from the seabed offshore Western Sahara. Source: Internet