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Saturday, July 26, 2008

The Remains of Tiny Shells


The material we call 'chalk' was formed during the time when dinosaurs lived on Earth. At that time the oceans were rising higher and higher until finally they covered most of the land.

Billions of tiny animals live in those oceans. They were so small you could not have seen them - they were even smaller than the full stop at the end of this sentence. These tiny creatures had shells made from the element calcium. When they died, their shells fell to the bottom of the sea. After thousands of years, there were many layers of shells on the ocean floor.

As more and more of the tiny shells pressed down from the top, those on the bottom became harder and began to stick together. Eventually the shells changed into a mineral called 'calcite', the main ingredient of the rock known as 'limestone'.

Many millions of years passed after the first chalk was made. The Earth's surface changed its shape, and the land and sea developed new coastlines. This left many chalk layers on dry land, both in the middle of continents and by the sea. In the south of England there are chalk cliffs 244 metres high. These are the famous White Cliffs of Dover, and they are almost solid chalk!

If you had a piece of chalk from of those cliffs, you could use it to write on a chalkboard. But the chalk that is used in classrooms is not dug from the cliffs or the ground. It is made in factories by mixing several different materials.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hey this is cool!

I grew up near the beach, and when I was a kid, I would be able to pick up these rocks and draw on the sidewalk with them. I think this just explained why!

The only reason my parents ever bought chalk is because it comes in color. Rock chalk only comes in white.

~Teresa

Uncle Che said...

This is a mixture of History, Geography and Biology. Subjects I am not good at. But when it comes to something that happened thousands or millions of years ago, I am all ears.
The 244 metres high chalk cliff in England interests me much.
Thanks for the knowledge and sharing.

cathy said...

wow, interesting to know. I never thought about where chalk came from.

Anonymous said...

Nice info you got here... I don't really knew about this that chalk exist long before.