From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishalluvialal‧lu‧vi‧al /əˈluːviəl/ adjective [usually before noun] technical SGmade of soil left by rivers, lakes, floods etc alluvial flood plains
Examples from the Corpus
alluvial• Much of this development has involved sugar-cane cultivation on sloping terrain in contrast to its confinement to flat alluvial areas prior to 1960.• The walls were mostly slate, apparently quite normal, grained rock produced by a perfectly standard physical process of alluvial deposition.• an alluvial plain• Carrying alluvial sands from the Rocky Mountains, they helped make the plains.• MAREUIL-SUR-Af: Belemnite chalk on the slopes beneath Mutigny, alluvial soil approaching Mareuil-sur-Aÿ itself.• The alluvial soil on which the city stood was frozen all year round but thawed a few feet down during the summer.• He loved the smell of the woods, and the damp alluvial soil that covered these mountains like a blanket.• Mineral alluvial soils have an A horizon and the effects of gleying can be present.• Saline alluvial soils have high levels of exchangeable sodium and the effects of gleying are clearly evident.