English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Refashioning of the earlier spelling isepiptesis, from German Isepiptesen used by Alexander von Middendorff in his 1855 work Die Isepiptesen Russlands, from iso- + Ancient Greek ἐπίπτησις (epíptēsis, flying down upon), from ἐπι- (epi-, upon) + πτῆσῐς (ptêsis, flight), from πέτομαι (pétomai, fly).

Noun

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isopiptesis (plural isopipteses)

  1. An isoline that joins points on a map where the individuals of a particular migratory species arrive at the same time each year.
    • 1892, J. A. Palmén, “Report on the Migration of Birds”, in C. W. Shoemaker, transl., Annual Report of the Smithsonian Institution[1]:
      The conclusion that the migration takes place at right angles to the isopipteses seemed justified; but, with regard to the direction of the bird's migration to be ascertained, could not possibly prove more exact than the premises themselves, the methods of inquiry, and the material.