Earth Science, Geologic Time & Fossils, 201-ARC
Planet Earth has billions of years of history, from the time when it was an inhospitable ball of hot magma to when its surface stabilized into a variety of diverse zones capable of supporting many life-forms. Many are the species that lived through the various geologic eras and left a trace of their existence in the fossils that we study today. But Earth is never done settling, as we can see from the earthquakes, tsunamis, volcanic eruptions, and other phenomena manifested in Earth’s crust, oceans, and atmosphere.
Earth Science, Geologic Time & Fossils Encyclopedia Articles By Title
2010 Haiti earthquake, large-scale earthquake that occurred January 12, 2010, on the West Indian island of Hispaniola,......
Cleveland Abbe was an American astronomer and meteorologist who assisted in the development and growth of the United......
Charles Greeley Abbot was an American astrophysicist who, as director of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory......
absolute humidity, the vapour concentration or density in the air. If mv is the mass of vapour in a volume of air,......
acanthite, a silver sulfide mineral (Ag2S) that is the most important ore of silver. It is abundant, with other......
accessory mineral, any mineral in an igneous rock not essential to the naming of the rock. When it is present in......
Acrisol, one of the 30 soil groups in the classification system of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).......
adapiform, any of several dozen extinct species of primates of the suborder Strepsirrhini (a group that includes......
adobe, a heavy clay soil used to make sun-dried bricks. The term, Spanish-Moorish in origin, also denotes the bricks......
advection, in atmospheric science, change in a property of a moving mass of air because the mass is transported......
aeronomy, study of the physics and chemistry of the upper atmosphere, including the distribution of temperature,......
aerosol, a system of liquid or solid particles uniformly distributed in a finely divided state through a gas, usually......
Africa, the second largest continent (after Asia), covering about one-fifth of the total land surface of Earth.......
- Introduction
- Geology, Plate Tectonics, History
- Paleozoic, Fossils, Geology
- Cenozoic, Wildlife, Climate
- Deserts, Savannas, Mountains
- Nile Basin, Wildlife, Cultures
- Orange Basin, Geography, Climate
- Climate, Regions, Variations
- Flora, Fauna, Ecosystems
- Mangrove Ecosystems, Ecology, Biodiversity
- Mediterranean Vegetation
- Wildlife, Fauna, Ecosystems
- Bird Diversity, Migration, Conservation
- Human Impact, Resources, Climate
- Conservation, Wildlife, Biodiversity
- Ethnic Groups, Cultures, Languages
- Sahel, Sahara, Coast
- Diversity, Ethnicity, Languages
- Population, Diversity, Migration
- Trade, Resources, Agriculture
- Metallic deposits
- Groundwater, Aquifers, Oases
- Farming, Crops, Livestock
- Fruits, Vegetables, Crops
- Trade, Resources, Markets
- Transportation, Trade, Infrastructure
aftershock, any of several lower-magnitude earthquakes that follow the main shock of a larger earthquake. An aftershock......
Agate Fossil Beds National Monument, natural “depository” of an extinct animal community on the Niobrara River......
agglomerate, large, coarse, rock fragments associated with lava flow that are ejected during explosive volcanic......
agglutinate, pyroclastic igneous rock formed from partly fused volcanic bombs. See bomb...
Agnostus, genus of trilobites (an extinct group of aquatic arthropods) found as fossils in rocks of Early Cambrian......
Georgius Agricola was a German scholar and scientist known as “the father of mineralogy.” While a highly educated......
air, mixture of gases comprising the Earth’s atmosphere. The mixture contains a group of gases of nearly constant......
air mass, in meteorology, large body of air having nearly uniform conditions of temperature and humidity at any......
air pocket, strong updraft, downdraft, or sudden fall in headwind or tailwind encountered by an aircraft in flight.......
air-sea interface, boundary between the atmosphere and the ocean waters. The air-sea interface is one of the most......
airglow, faint luminescence of Earth’s upper atmosphere that is caused by air molecules’ and atoms’ selective absorption......
John Aitken was a Scottish physicist and meteorologist who, through a series of experiments and observations in......
alabaster, fine-grained, massive gypsum that has been used for centuries for statuary, carvings, and other ornaments.......
Alaska earthquake of 1964, earthquake that occurred in south-central Alaska on March 27, 1964, with a moment magnitude......
Alaskan mountains, three principal mountain groups of far northwestern North America—the Brooks Range, Alaska Range,......
Albeluvisol, one of the 30 soil groups in the classification system of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).......
Albert was the prince of Monaco (1889–1922), seaman, amateur oceanographer, and patron of the sciences, whose contributions......
Aleppo earthquake of 1138, earthquake, among the deadliest ever recorded, that struck the Syrian city of Aleppo......
Aleutian low, large atmospheric low-pressure (cyclonic) centre that frequently exists over the Aleutian Islands......
Alexander Polyhistor was a philosopher, geographer, and historian whose fragmentary writings provide valuable information......
Alfisol, one of the 12 soil orders in the U.S. Soil Taxonomy. Alfisols are arable soils with water content adequate......
Alisol, one of the 30 soil groups in the classification system of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).......
alkaline rock, any of various rocks in which the chemical content of the alkalies (potassium oxide and sodium oxide)......
allemontite, the mineral arsenic antimonide (AsSb). It commonly occurs in veins, as at Allemont, Isère, Fr.; Valtellina,......
alstonite, a barium and calcium carbonate mineral, CaBa(CO3)2, with minor amounts of strontium. It is colourless......
alum, any of a group of hydrated double salts, usually consisting of aluminum sulfate, water of hydration, and......
alunite, a widespread rock-forming sulfate mineral that occupies pockets or seams in volcanic rocks such as rhyolites,......
alunogen, a sulfate mineral formed by sulfate solutions that attack aluminous minerals; alunogen is hydrated aluminum......
Walter Alvarez is an American geologist and expert on plate tectonics and mountain formation, best known for the......
amalgam, alloy of mercury and one or more other metals. Amalgams are crystalline in structure, except for those......
amber, fossil tree resin that has achieved a stable state through loss of volatile constituents and chemical change......
amblygonite, phosphate mineral composed of lithium, sodium, and aluminum phosphate [(Li,Na)AlPO4(F,OH)], that is......
Ambondro, genus of extinct shrewlike mammals known from fossils dating from the Middle Jurassic (175.6 million......
Florentino Ameghino was a paleontologist, anthropologist, and geologist, whose fossil discoveries on the Argentine......
American Philosophical Society, oldest extant learned society in the United States, founded under the impetus of......
Amery Ice Shelf, large body of floating ice, in an indentation in the Indian Ocean coastline of Antarctica, west......
Ameura, genus of trilobites (extinct arthropods) found as fossils in North America rocks dating from the Late Carboniferous......
ammonium chloride (NH4Cl), the salt of ammonia and hydrogen chloride. Its principal uses are as a nitrogen supply......
ammonoid, any of a group of extinct cephalopods (of the phylum Mollusca), forms related to the modern pearly nautilus......
amphibole, any of a group of common rock-forming silicate minerals. Amphiboles are found principally in metamorphic......
amphibole asbestos, a variety of the silicate mineral actinolite...
amphibolite, a rock composed largely or dominantly of minerals of the amphibole group. The term has been applied......
amphibolite facies, one of the major divisions of the mineral-facies classification of metamorphic rocks, the rocks......
Amphitherium, extinct genus of early mammals known as fossils from Middle Jurassic deposits (of 176 million to......
amygdule, secondary deposit of minerals found in a rounded, elongated, or almond-shaped cavity in igneous rock.......
anatexis, in geology, the differential, or partial, melting of rocks. Each mineral in a rock has its own melting......
Ancash earthquake of 1970, earthquake that originated off the coast of Peru on May 31, 1970, and caused massive......
Anchura, genus of extinct marine gastropods (snails) found as fossils only in marine deposits of Cretaceous age......
andalusite, (Al2SiO5), aluminum silicate mineral that occurs in relatively small amounts in various metamorphic......
Andean Geosyncline, a linear trough in the Earth’s crust in which rocks of the Mesozoic Era (251 million to 65.5......
andesite, any member of a large family of rocks that occur in most of the world’s volcanic areas. Andesites occur......
Andisol, one of the 12 soil orders in the U.S. Soil Taxonomy. Andisols are defined by the single property of having......
Andosol, one of the 30 soil groups in the classification system of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).......
Roy Chapman Andrews was a naturalist, explorer, and author, who led many important scientific expeditions for which......
Aneurophyton, genus of extinct plants that lived during the Middle and Late Devonian epochs (about 398 to 359 million......
anglesite, naturally occurring lead sulfate (PbSO4). A common secondary mineral that is a minor ore of lead, it......
anhydrite, an important rock-forming mineral, anhydrous calcium sulfate (CaSO4). It differs chemically from gypsum......
annabergite, hydrated nickel arsenate mineral that is very similar to erythrite...
was a prolific English fossil hunter and amateur anatomist credited with the discovery of several specimens of......
anorthosite, type of intrusive igneous rock composed predominantly of calcium-rich plagioclase feldspar. All anorthosites......
George Anson, Baron Anson was a British admiral whose four-year voyage around the world is one of the great tales......
Antarctic Convergence, transition region of the Southern Hemisphere, a major boundary zone of the world’s oceans......
Antarctica, the world’s southernmost and fifth largest continent. Its landmass is almost wholly covered by a vast......
- Introduction
- Ice, Wildlife, Continent
- Polar, Ice, Climate
- Glaciers, Seas, Ice
- Flora, Fauna, Ecosystems
- Penguins, Seals, Whales
- Resources, Wildlife, Climate
- Wildlife, Marine Life, Ecosystems
- Exploration, Wildlife, Ice
- Exploration, Ice, Wildlife
- National Rivalries, Claims
- IGY, Treaty, Exploration
- Treaty, Continent, Wildlife
anthophyllite, an amphibole mineral, a magnesium and iron silicate that occurs in altered rocks, such as the crystalline......
Anthrosol, one of the 30 soil groups in the classification system of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).......
antiarch, any of an order of extinct, mainly freshwater, jawed fishes, class Placodermi, abundant during Middle......
anticyclone, any large wind system that rotates about a centre of high atmospheric pressure clockwise in the Northern......
antimonide, any member of a rare mineral group consisting of compounds of one or more metals with antimony (Sb).......
antimony (Sb), a metallic element belonging to the nitrogen group (Group 15 [Va] of the periodic table). Antimony......
antlerite, a copper sulfate mineral, Cu3(SO4) (OH)4, that is found in the oxidized zone of copper deposits, particularly......
Jean-Baptiste Bourguignon d’Anville was a French geographer and cartographer who greatly improved the standards......
Aouelloul Crater, large crater located 28 mi (45 km) southwest of Chinguetti, Mauritania, and thought to stem from......
apatite, any member of a series of phosphate minerals, the world’s major source of phosphorus, found as variously......
apophyllite, potassium-calcium fluoride-silicate mineral that is related structurally to the zeolite family of......
Appalachian Geosyncline, Great downbuckle in the Earth’s crust in the region of the present Appalachian Mountains.......
Appleton layer, upper layer (called F2) of the F region of the ionosphere. The layer was named for British physicist......
aquifer, in hydrology, rock layer that contains water and releases it in appreciable amounts. The rock contains......
aragonite, widespread mineral, the stable form of calcium carbonate (CaCO3) at high pressures. It may be distinguished......
Aramis, site of paleoanthropological excavations in the Awash River valley in the Afar region of Ethiopia, best......
Archaefructus, extinct genus of aquatic flowering plants (angiosperms) from northeastern China dated to the Early......
archaeocyathid, any member of an extinct group of marine organisms of uncertain relationships found as fossils......
Archaeopteris, genus of plants that was probably the first true tree to form forests during the Late Devonian Epoch......
Archaeopteryx, genus of feathered dinosaur that was once thought to be the oldest known fossil bird. The specimens......
Archean Eon, the earlier of the two formal divisions of Precambrian time (about 4.6 billion to 541 million years......
Archelon, extinct giant sea turtle known from fossilized remains found in North American rocks of the Late Cretaceous......
Arches National Park, desert area of sandstone formations in eastern Utah, U.S., on the Colorado River just north......
Archosaurus, early genus of reptiles found as fossils in Middle and Late Permian deposits of Europe (265 million......