Earth Science, Geologic Time & Fossils, RAM-SCY

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.
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Earth Science, Geologic Time & Fossils Encyclopedia Articles By Title

Ramapithecus
Ramapithecus, fossil primate dating from the Middle and Late Miocene epochs (about 16.6 million to 5.3 million......
Ramusio, Giovanni Battista
Giovanni Battista Ramusio was an Italian geographer who compiled an important collection of travel writings, Delle......
Ratzel, Friedrich
Friedrich Ratzel was a German geographer and ethnographer and a principal influence in the modern development of......
Read, Herbert Harold
Herbert Harold Read was a geologist known for his research on the origins of granite. A member of His Majesty’s......
realgar
realgar, an important ore of arsenic, a red or orange mineral containing both arsenic and sulfur. Typically it......
Reclus, Élisée
Élisée Reclus was a French geographer and anarchist who was awarded the gold medal of the Paris Geographical Society......
red snow
red snow, snow or ice surfaces, usually overlying soil on mountains, that are coloured by algae such as Chlamydomonas......
red soil
red soil, Any of a group of soils that develop in a warm, temperate, moist climate under deciduous or mixed forests......
reflection seismology
reflection seismology, analysis of vibrations caused by man-made explosions to determine Earth structures, generally......
regolith
regolith, a region of loose unconsolidated rock and dust that sits atop a layer of bedrock. On Earth, regolith......
Regosol
Regosol, one of the 30 soil groups in the classification system of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).......
relative humidity
relative humidity, ratio of the actual vapour pressure of water in the air to that in air saturated with water......
remanent magnetism
remanent magnetism, the permanent magnetism in rocks, resulting from the orientation of the Earth’s magnetic field......
Rennell, James
James Rennell was the leading British geographer of his time. Rennell constructed the first nearly accurate map......
Rensselaeria
Rensselaeria, genus of extinct brachiopods (lamp shells) found as fossils in Lower Devonian marine rocks (387 to......
Resserella
Resserella, extinct genus of brachiopods (lamp shells) that occurs as fossils in marine rocks of Middle Ordovician......
Rhamphorhynchus
Rhamphorhynchus, (genus Rhamphorhynchus), flying reptile (pterosaurs) found as fossils from the Late Jurassic Period......
Rhipidistia
Rhipidistia, extinct group of lobe-finned bony fishes of the order Crossopterygii that included the ancestors of......
rhodochrosite
rhodochrosite, mineral, composed of manganese carbonate (MnCO3), that is a source of manganese for the ferromanganese......
Rhynchotrema
Rhynchotrema, extinct genus of brachiopods, or lamp shells, found as fossils in Middle and Late Ordovician rocks......
Rhynchotreta
Rhynchotreta, extinct genus of brachiopods (lamp shells) commonly found as fossils in Silurian marine rocks (between......
Rhynie plant
Rhynie plant, rootless, leafless, spore-bearing plant preserved in the Rhynie Chert, a mineral deposit that has......
rhyolite
rhyolite, extrusive igneous rock that is the volcanic equivalent of granite. Most rhyolites are porphyritic, indicating......
Richardson, Lewis Fry
Lewis Fry Richardson was a British physicist and psychologist who was the first to apply mathematical techniques......
Richter scale
Richter scale (ML), quantitative measure of an earthquake’s magnitude (size), devised in 1935 by American seismologists......
Richter, Charles F.
Charles F. Richter was an American physicist and seismologist who developed the Richter scale for measuring earthquake......
Richthofen, Ferdinand Paul Wilhelm, Freiherr von
Ferdinand Paul Wilhelm, baron von Richthofen was a German geographer and geologist who produced a major work on......
rickardite
rickardite, copper telluride mineral with the formula Cu7Te5, the purple-red masses of which resemble tarnished......
riebeckite
riebeckite, a sodium-iron silicate mineral [Na2Fe2+3Fe3+2Si8O22(OH)2] in the amphibole family. It forms part of......
rime
rime, white, opaque, granular deposit of ice crystals formed on objects that are at a temperature below the freezing......
Ring of Fire
Ring of Fire, long horseshoe-shaped seismically active belt of earthquake epicentres, volcanoes, and tectonic plate......
rip current
rip current, narrow jetlike stream of water that flows sporadically seaward for several minutes, in a direction......
ripple mark
ripple mark, one of a series of small marine, lake, or riverine topographic features, consisting of repeating wavelike......
Rittenhouse, David
David Rittenhouse was an American astronomer and inventor who was an early observer of the atmosphere of Venus.......
Ritter, Carl
Carl Ritter was a German geographer who was a cofounder, with Alexander von Humboldt, of modern geographical science.......
Riversleigh fossils
Riversleigh fossils, any of numerous assemblages of fossils found at Riversleigh Station, in northwestern Queensland,......
Robinson, Edward
Edward Robinson was an American biblical scholar, considered the father of biblical geography. Robinson graduated......
rock-forming mineral
rock-forming mineral, any mineral that forms igneous, sedimentary, or metamorphic rocks and that typically, or......
Rodinia
Rodinia, in geologic time, a supercontinent that incorporated almost all the landmasses on Earth for about 450......
Rogers, Henry Darwin
Henry Darwin Rogers was an American structural geologist who contributed much to the theory of mountain building......
rogue wave
rogue wave, a relatively unpredictable and unexpectedly high water wave arising at the water’s surface and formed......
romanechite
romanechite, barium and manganese oxide [(Ba, H2O)2(Mn4+, Mn3+)5O10], an important ore mineral of manganese. A......
Romer, Alfred Sherwood
Alfred Sherwood Romer was a U.S. paleontologist widely known for his concepts of evolutionary history of vertebrate......
Ronne Ice Shelf
Ronne Ice Shelf, large body of floating ice, lying at the head of the Weddell Sea, which is itself an indentation......
roof pendant
roof pendant, downward extension of the surrounding rock that protrudes into the upper surface of an igneous intrusive......
Rosenbusch, Karl Heinrich Ferdinand
Karl Heinrich Ferdinand Rosenbusch was a German geologist who laid the foundations of the science of microscopic......
Ross Ice Shelf
Ross Ice Shelf, world’s largest body of floating ice, lying at the head of Ross Sea, itself an enormous indentation......
Rossby, Carl-Gustaf Arvid
Carl-Gustaf Arvid Rossby was a Swedish American meteorologist whose innovations in the study of large-scale air......
Royal Geographical Society
Royal Geographical Society (RGS), British group founded as the Geographical Society of London in 1830. Its headquarters......
Rubey, William W.
William W. Rubey was a U.S. geologist known for his theory, proposed in 1951, of the origin of the Earth’s atmosphere,......
Ruffin, Edmund
Edmund Ruffin was known as the father of soil chemistry in the United States, who showed how to restore fertility......
Runcorn, Stanley Keith
Stanley Keith Runcorn was a British geophysicist whose pioneering studies of paleomagnetism provided early evidence......
runoff
runoff, in hydrology, quantity of water discharged in surface streams. Runoff includes not only the waters that......
Russell, Richard Joel
Richard Joel Russell was a geologist known for his studies of coastal morphology. He was a professor of geology......
Sabine, Edward
Edward Sabine was an Anglo-Irish astronomer and geodesist noted for his experiments in determining the shape of......
sabre-toothed cat
sabre-toothed cat, any of the extinct catlike carnivores belonging to either the extinct family Nimravidae or the......
Saccopastore skulls
Saccopastore skulls, two Neanderthal fossils found in 1929 and 1935 in a river deposit on the bank of a small tributary......
Saffir-Simpson hurricane scale
Saffir-Simpson hurricane scale, index of tropical cyclone intensity that classifies a storm’s wind speed into one......
Saint Elmo’s fire
Saint Elmo’s fire, luminosity accompanying brushlike discharges of atmospheric electricity that sometimes appears......
Saint-Césaire
Saint-Césaire, paleoanthropological site in southwestern France where in 1979 the remains of a young adult male......
salinity
salinity, the amount of dissolved salts present in water. In natural bodies of water, salinity is most commonly......
salt dome
salt dome, largely subsurface geologic structure that consists of a vertical cylinder of salt (including halite......
salt nucleus
salt nucleus, tiny particle in the atmosphere that is composed of a salt, either solid or in an aqueous solution;......
saltpetre
saltpetre, any of three naturally occurring nitrates, distinguished as (1) ordinary saltpetre, or potassium nitrate,......
saltwater intrusion
saltwater intrusion (SI), ecological problem produced by the encroachment and infiltration of salt water (typically......
San Andreas Fault
San Andreas Fault, major fracture of the Earth’s crust in extreme western North America. The fault trends northwestward......
San Francisco earthquake of 1906
San Francisco earthquake of 1906, major earthquake with a magnitude of 7.9 that occurred on April 18, 1906, at......
San Francisco earthquake of 1989
San Francisco earthquake of 1989, major earthquake that struck the San Francisco Bay Area, California, U.S., on......
sand
sand, mineral, rock, or soil particles that range in diameter from 0.02 to 2 mm (0.0008–0.08 inch). Most of the......
sandstone
sandstone, lithified accumulation of sand-sized grains (0.063 to 2 mm [0.0025 to 0.08 inch] in diameter). It is......
sanidinite facies
sanidinite facies, one of the major divisions of the mineral facies classification of metamorphic rocks, the rocks......
Sanmiguelia
Sanmiguelia, genus of fossil plants based upon impressions of palmlike leaves from the Triassic Period (251 to......
satin spar
satin spar, massive (noncrystalline) variety of the mineral gypsum...
saturation deficit
saturation deficit, an index of humidity typically characterized by the difference between the saturation vapour......
Sauer, Carl O
Carl O. Sauer was an American geographer who was an authority on desert studies, tropical areas, the human geography......
saurischian
saurischian, any member of one of the two major lineages of dinosaurs, including birds and all dinosaurs more closely......
sauropod
sauropod, any member of the dinosaur subgroup Sauropoda, marked by large size, a long neck and tail, a four-legged......
sauropterygian
sauropterygian, any of the aquatic reptiles found as fossils from the Mesozoic Era (251 million to 66 million years......
Saussure, Horace Bénédict de
Horace Bénédict de Saussure was a Swiss physicist, geologist, and early Alpine explorer who developed an improved......
saussuritization
saussuritization, process by which calcium-bearing plagioclase feldspar is altered to a characteristic assemblage......
Scaphites
Scaphites, extinct genus of cephalopods (animals related to the modern octopus, squid, and nautilus) found as fossils......
Schaefer, Vincent Joseph
Vincent Joseph Schaefer was an American research chemist and meteorologist who in 1946 carried out the first systematic......
scheelite
scheelite, calcium tungstate mineral, CaWO4, that is an important ore of tungsten. It acquired commercial value......
Schindewolf, Otto Heinrich
Otto Heinrich Schindewolf was a German paleontologist, known for his research on corals and cephalopods. Schindewolf......
schist
schist, megascopically crystalline rock that has a highly developed schistosity, or tendency to split into layers.......
schistosity
schistosity, mode of foliation that occurs in certain metamorphic rocks as a consequence of the parallel alignment......
Schizodus
Schizodus, extinct genus of small mollusks found as fossils in rocks from the Devonian to the Permian Period (416......
Schmitt, Harrison
Harrison Schmitt is an American geologist, astronaut, and politician who was part of the Apollo space program’s......
schreibersite
schreibersite, mineral consisting of iron nickel phosphide [(Fe,Ni)3P] that is present in most meteorites containing......
Schuchert, Charles
Charles Schuchert was an American paleontologist who was a leader in the development of paleogeography, the study......
Schwagerina
Schwagerina, extinct genus of fusulinid foraminiferans, small, single-celled protozoans related to the modern amoeba......
scoria
scoria, heavy, dark-coloured, glassy, pyroclastic igneous rock that contains many vesicles (bubblelike cavities).......
scorodite
scorodite, mineral in the variscite group, hydrated iron arsenate (FeAsO4·2H2O). It forms pale leek-green or grayish......
scorzalite
scorzalite, phosphate mineral, (Fe2+,Mg)Al2(PO4)2(OH)2, similar to lazulite...
Scott, Dunkinfield Henry
Dunkinfield Henry Scott was an English paleobotanist and leading authority of his time on the structure of fossil......
Scottish Enlightenment
Scottish Enlightenment, the conjunction of minds, ideas, and publications in Scotland during the whole of the second......
Scrope, George Julius Poulett
George Julius Poulett Scrope was an English geologist and political economist whose volcanic studies helped depose......
scrubbing tower
scrubbing tower, a form of carbon capture in which carbon dioxide (CO2) is removed from air funneled into a large,......
Scylax Of Caryanda
Scylax Of Caryanda was an ancient Greek explorer who was a pioneer in geography and the first Western observer......

Earth Science, Geologic Time & Fossils Encyclopedia Articles By Title