moulin

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(mū-lăN') pronunciation
n.
A nearly vertical shaft or cavity worn in a glacier by surface or rock debris falling through a crack in the ice.

[French, mill, moulin, from Old French molin, mill, from Late Latin molīnum. See mill1.]


Also known as a glacier mill, this is a rounded, often vertical hole within stagnating glacier ice. Meltwater, heavily charged with debris, swirls into the hole. Some of this debris settles out at the base of the moulin. After the retreat of the ice, a mound, known as a moulin kame, is left behind.

Moulins (mūlăN'), city (1990 pop. 23,353), capital of Allier dept., central France, on the Allier River. Clothing, shoes, dyes, automobile parts, and household products are manufactured. It is also an agricultural market. Formerly capital of the duchy of Bourbonnais (c.10th-16th cent.), Moulins has remarkable artistic and historic treasures. The cathedral contains a superb 15th-century triptych, and the tomb of Henri de Montmorency, designed by François Anguier, is at the former convent (now a school) of the Order of Visitation. Other historic buildings are the ruined castle of the dukes of Bourbon and a Renaissance pavilion. Although the dukes resided at Moulins from the mid-14th cent., the city did not become capital of the duchy until the late 15th cent. The duchy was confiscated by the French crown in 1527. In 1566, Charles IX held an assembly at Moulins where important administrative and legal reforms were adopted.


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