Sifting through the sands of time

Reading Skills (10)

1 When you're on the beach, you're stepping on ancient mountains, skeletons of marine animals, even tiny diamonds. Sand provides a mineral treasure-changing processes. 

2 Sand : as children we play on it and as adults we relax on it. It is something we complain about when it gets in our food, and praise when it's moulded into castles. But we don't often look at it. If we did, we would discover an account of a geological past and a history of marine life that goes back thousands and, in some cases, millions of years. 

3 Sand covers not just sea-shores, but also ocean beds, deserts and mountains. It is one of the most common substances on Earth. And it is a major element in man-made items too concrete is largely sand, while glass is made of little else. 

4 What exactly is sand ? Well, it is larger than fine dust and smaller than shingle. Depending on its age and origin, a particular sand can  consist of tiny pebbles or porous granules. Its grain may have the shape of stars or spirals, their edges jagged or smooth. They have come from the erosion of rocks, or from the skeletons of marine organisms which accumulate on the bottom of the oceans, or even from volcanic eruptions. 

5 Colour is another clue to sand's orgin. If it is a dazzling white its grains may be derived from nearby coral outcrops, from crystalline quartz rocks or from gypsum. On Pacific islands jet black sands form from volcanic minerals. 

6 Usually, the older the granules, the finer they are and the smoother the edges. The fine, white beaches, for instance, are recycled from sandstone several hundred million years old. Perhaps they will be stone once more, in another few hundred million. 

7 Sand is an irreplaceable industrial ingredient whose uses are legion : but it has one vital function you might never even notice. Sand cushions our land from the sea's impact, and geologists say it often does a better job of protecting our shores than the most advanced coastal technology. 

On the basis of your understanding of the passage, answer any five questions from the six given below :

i. How is sand a "treasure-trove'?

Treasure trove :

  • rich collection of minerals provided by sand.
  • a record of geological past/ earth’s changing process. 

ii How is sand both a pain and a pleasure ?

Pain: When sand gets in food.

Pleasure: When moulded into castles.

iii. Name two man-made materials that contain sand.

  • Concrete
  • Glass

iv. List the different shapes of sand.

Stars, spirals, their edges jagged or smooth 

v. What is the origin of white sand ?

Coral outcrops, crystalline quartz rocks or gypsum, erosion of rocks, volcanic eruption, marine organisms

vi. In what ways are older granules different from recent granules ?

older granules are finer and smoother around the edges

Exam Year: 2022