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A subdivision in the lower Silurian system of America; -- so named from Trenton Falls, in New York. The rocks are mostly limestones, and the period is divided into the Trenton, Utica, and Cincinnati epochs. See the Chart of Geology.
Any one of several species of small insessorial birds of the genus Cinclus (or Hydrobates), especially the European water ousel (C. aquaticus), and the American water ousel (C. Mexicanus). These birds live about the water, and are in the habit of walking on the bottom of streams beneath the water in search of food.
An epoch at the close of the American lower Silurian system. The rocks are well developed near Cincinnati, Ohio. The group includes the Hudson River and Lorraine shales of New York.
CINC
v. t.
To produce cinchonism in; to poison with quinine or with cinchona.
a.
Allied or pertaining to cinchona, or to the plants that produce it.
n.
See Cinchonism.
n.
Having or wearing a cincture or girdle.
n.
A brownish resinous substance obtained as a by-product in the treatment of cinchona bark. It consists of a mixture of several alkaloids.
n.
A girdle; a cincture.
n.
An amorphous bitter glucoside derived from cinchona and other barks. Called also quinova bitter, and quinova.
a.
Pertaining to, derived from, or connected with, quinine and related compounds; specifically, designating a nonnitrogenous acid obtained from cinchona bark, coffee, beans, etc., as a white crystalline substance.
a.
Belonging to, or obtained from, cinchona.
a.
Pertaining to, or designating, a crystalline acid obtained from some varieties of cinchona bark.
n.
One of the quinine group of alkaloids, found especially in red cinchona bark. It is a white crystalline substance, C19H22N2O, with a bitter taste and qualities similar to, but weaker than, quinine; -- sometimes called also cinchonidia.
a.
Wearing a mask or masks; characterized by masks; cincealed; hidden.
n.
The bark of any species of Cinchona containing three per cent. or more of bitter febrifuge alkaloids; Peruvian bark; Jesuits' bark.
n.
An alkaloid extracted from the bark of several species of cinchona (esp. Cinchona Calisaya) as a bitter white crystalline substance, C20H24N2O2. Hence, by extension (Med.), any of the salts of this alkaloid, as the acetate, chloride, sulphate, etc., employed as a febrifuge or antiperiodic. Called also quinia, quinina, etc.
n.
The science which treats of the cultivation of the cinchona, and of its use in medicine.
n.
One of the quinine group of alkaloids isomeric with and resembling cinchonidine; -- called also cinchonia.
n.
An alkaloid isomeric with, and resembling, quinine, found in certain species of cinchona, from which it is extracted as a bitter white crystalline substance; conchinine. It is used somewhat as a febrifuge.
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