The Perpetual Rain of Sediments to the Ocean Floor

For the sediments are the materials of the most stupendous 'snowfall' the earth has ever seen. It began when the first rains fell on the barren rocks and set in motion the forces of erosion. It was accelerated when living creatures developed in the suface waters and the discarded little shells of lime or silica that had encased them in life began to drift downward to the bottom. Silently, endlessly, with the deliberation of earth processes that can afford to be slow because they have so much time for completion, the accumulation of the sediments has proceeded. So little in a year, or in a human lifetime, but so enormous an amount in the life of earth and sea.

Notes:

Dust from deserts, minerals from rivers, and shells from lifeforms in the ocean are constantly raining down onto the ocean floor.

Folksonomies: nature

Taxonomies:
/business and industrial/chemicals industry/plastics and polymers (0.509468)
/law, govt and politics/legal issues/human rights (0.499455)
/business and industrial/agriculture and forestry/crops and seed (0.338411)

Keywords:
stupendous \'snowfall\ (0.953858 (positive:0.419631)), suface waters (0.894989 (negative:-0.538359)), barren rocks (0.876213 (negative:-0.516423)), human lifetime (0.727428 (neutral:0.000000)), little shells (0.709952 (negative:-0.538359)), sediments (0.535883 (negative:-0.007177)), earth (0.440639 (negative:-0.075515)), deliberation (0.238507 (negative:-0.449888)), rains (0.238415 (negative:-0.516423)), silica (0.209243 (negative:-0.538359)), accumulation (0.207248 (negative:-0.426809)), lime (0.206588 (negative:-0.538359))

Concepts:
Evolution (0.905168): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Classical mechanics (0.889281): dbpedia | freebase
Geomorphology (0.842302): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Sediment (0.783047): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Newton's laws of motion (0.781565): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc | yago
World population (0.763679): website | dbpedia | freebase
Water (0.755155): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Universe (0.738157): dbpedia | freebase

 The Sea Around Us
Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book:  Carson, Rachel L. (1951), The Sea Around Us, Oxford University Press, New York, Retrieved on 2010-11-30
Folksonomies: nature