Now it broke altogether into a wide crevasse.
On the Everest expedition, one climber whose "buhs" and "puhs" overlapped wanted to leap over a wide crevasse, Dr. Lieberman said.
There the floor was cleft, as if by a giant ax, forming a wide crevasse that went to limitless, blackened depths.
And now, here, just as she had said, the path bridged a wider crevasse than usual, and then branched once more.
The mind-bending architecture of this central pillar is held in place by vertical shafts of a gelatinous, almost liquid consistency, constantly gushing upwards out of wide crevasses.
Separating the worshippers from this altar is a wide crevasse out of which wisps of smoke rise occasionally.
Long before the base had vanished over the horizon, Clavain had run into the edge of a deep, wide crevasse.
Just beyond stood a small range of hills, and past that a deep, wide crevasse split the ground, running toward the horizon until it disappeared into a thin line.
There were boards up over the deeper and wider crevasses, and the yellow danger tape spread everywhere was torn and cut away, left to rustle in the evening breeze.
Sinking in this cauldron of flame and molten rock, the Shrike threw back its head, opened its wide crevasse of a mouth, and bellowed.