exfoliation

ex-foh-lee-AY-shun

The peeling away of concentric sheets of rock from a cliff face or dome, like the layers of an onion — caused by the release of pressure as overlying material is eroded away and the rock beneath expands slightly toward the surface. Exfoliation produces the smooth, rounded domes characteristic of granite landscapes: Half Dome, Stone Mountain, the inselbergs of the Sahara. The rock is shedding its own skin.
Etymology
Latin exfoliareex- (out of, from) + folium (leaf). To shed leaves — the rock leafs off in sheets.
geology Latin
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