An arete.
arete
The ridge that separates two corries is known as a "divide" or "arete." An arete is a narrow, sharp-edged ridge formed by the erosion of glaciers on either side. This geological feature is typically found in mountainous regions where glacial activity has shaped the landscape.
A diathermal wall is a boundary between two systems that allows heat transfer to occur between them. This means that energy in the form of heat can pass through the diathermal wall, allowing the systems to exchange thermal energy. In contrast, an adiabatic wall does not allow heat transfer.
Corries or Cirques are bowl like hollows in a mountain range, formed by the action of a small glacier.
The cell plate is the barrier that forms between two daughter cells just before cytokinesis in plant cells. It consists of vesicles containing cell wall materials that fuse at the metaphase plate to form a new cell wall.
arete
The Corries were a Scottish folk group that was active between the 1960s and 1990. The main performers of the group were Roy Williamson and Ronnie Browne.
The common wall shared between two buildings is also known as a party wall.
A structural (fireproof) wall between the two homes.
The ridge that separates two corries is known as a "divide" or "arete." An arete is a narrow, sharp-edged ridge formed by the erosion of glaciers on either side. This geological feature is typically found in mountainous regions where glacial activity has shaped the landscape.
The wall between the two upper heart chambers is called the septum
Sharp narrow ridge separating two glacial troughs (U-shaped valleys), or corries.
A solid portion between two crenels in a battlement or crenelated wall. An open space or notch between two merlons in a battlement or crenelated wall.
Norris
The potential difference between the two holes in a standard wall socket in the US is 120 volts.
people who live in CORRY!
Corries are armchair-shaped hollows, which are found high up on the sides of hills. They are often formed on the shaded and therefore colder side of the hill. Here the snow does not melt as fast and there can be a build up of snow which is squashed and turned into ice. As the ice moves downhill it erodes the underlying rock, eventually producing a corrie. Often two or more corries are formed leaving a narrow ridge between them. This is called an arete. When a hill has been heavily eroded with 3 or 4 corries the jagged hill that is left is known as a horn or pyramidal peak.