The whorls are constricted above, slightly nodulously longitudinally plicate below, and flexuously longitudinally striate.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Lasers striate the walls of the old city to create incredibly detailed tableaux of Plantagenet banquets, mythical Roman monsters and fairy-tale forests.
From the telegraph.co.uk
To the east rise the pinnacles of Mt Gelai and, facing north, flamingos striate the heat haze with pink across the southern shore of Lake Natron.
From the nzherald.co.nz
Interestingly, there was no sign of neurogenesis in a fourth area, the striate cortex, which handles the initial, and more rudimentary, steps of visual processing.
From the sciencedaily.com
More examples
Marked with stria or striations
(striation) stria: any of a number of tiny parallel grooves such as: the scratches left by a glacier on rocks or the streaks or ridges in muscle tissue
(striation) band: a stripe or stripes of contrasting color; "chromosomes exhibit characteristic bands"; "the black and yellow banding of bees and wasps"
In geology, a striation means linear furrows generated from fault movement.
(Striated) Glacial striations or glacial grooves are scratches or gouges cut into bedrock by process of glacial abrasion. Glacial striations usually occur as multiple straight, parallel grooves representing the movement of the sediment-loaded base of the glacier. ...
(striated) Having parallel lines or grooves on the surface
(striation) (mineralogy) One of a number of parallel grooves and ridges in a rock or rocky deposit, formed by repeated twinning or cleaving of crystals; (geomorphology) One of a number of parallel scratch lines in rock outcrops, formed when glaciers dragged rocks across the landscape; The ...
(striated) marked with lines or grooves
(Striated) Covered in fine lines. Often used to describe thin parallel lines around the edge of a cap.