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Lithosphere/rocks minerals sedimentary

There were times on our planet when the barren dryness of uninhabited continents sharply contrasted with the densely populated sea. The continental lithosphere was then essentially represented by rock surfaces of different types. Sedimentary rocks were rare, if not absent. As rock materials became exposed to the subaerial environment at the Earth s surface, they encountered a whole range of environmental challenges such as temperature fluctuations, water, unbuffered cosmic and solar irradiation and atmospheric gases and solids instead of dissolved species. These influences resulted in rocks undergoing alterations in material properties leading to erosion and breakdown into ever-smaller particles and constituent minerals, formation of sandy sediments, and mineral soils (Ehrlich, 1996). Primordial terrestrial environments can therefore be visualized as a freshly exposed and only slightly physically pre-weathered rock surface. [Pg.267]


See other pages where Lithosphere/rocks minerals sedimentary is mentioned: [Pg.393]    [Pg.297]    [Pg.491]    [Pg.466]    [Pg.457]    [Pg.447]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.208]    [Pg.1]    [Pg.37]    [Pg.495]    [Pg.447]    [Pg.176]    [Pg.597]    [Pg.401]    [Pg.905]    [Pg.226]   


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Lithosphere

Lithosphere/rocks

Sedimentary rock

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