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Any solid material lying on top of bedrock, including soil and rock fragments.
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The unconsolidated mantle of weathered rock and soil material on the earth's surface, the loose earth material above the solid rock.
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relict soil
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The term used for the layer of unconsolidated weathered material, which includes mineral grains, rock fragments and other superficial deposits which lie above the solid bedrock.
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a layer of loose rock and rocky debris sitting on the top of a hard surface; The regolith of the Moon was produced by meteors striking the Moon's surface.
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The layer of loose, heterogeneous material lying on top of bedrock; includes soil, unweathered fragments of parent rock, and rock fragments weathered from the bedrock.
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(reg' oh lith) - A mixture of rocky fragments covering the surface of an asteroid or planet, the product of "gardening" by repeated meteorite impacts.
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Sediment derived directly from igneous rock and not containing any organically-derived materials
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Weathered rocks, gravel, soil and such that covers bedrock.
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The mantle of unconsolidated fragmental material that covers a land surface; i.e., soil and fractured rock.
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Layer of loose mineral particles overlying the bedrock, which may be derived from weathering of the underlying bedrock or have been transported from other locations ___________________________________________________________________________________________________
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A general term used in reference to unconsolidated rock, alluvium or soil material on top of the bedrock. Regolith may be formed in place or transported in from adjacent lands.
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The blanket of soil and loose rock fragments overlying the bedrock.
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The unconsolidated residual material that resides on the solid surface of the Moon (or Earth).
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All layers of weathered rock, sediments and soil material covering the surface.
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the "soil" that covers the solid rock on a planet's surface.
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A general term for loose material overlying bedrock.
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rock derived by weathering of bedrock
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the layer of loose, broken, rocky material covering the surface of the bedrock. It includes all types of rock waste, together with superficial deposits of alluvium, peat, wind-blown sand and glacial drift.
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the basal layer of soil, composed of material that is still recognisable as weathered rock or other geological deposits (such as alluvium); grades upwards into overlying subsoil.
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A powdery soil layer on the Moon's surface caused by bombardment by meteoroids.
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lunar "soil" composed of pulverized rock material
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Weathered or sedimentary material that is over bedrock.
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Surface debris on solar-system objects produced by impacting bodies.
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Loose, unconsolidated rock, mineral and glass fragments. On the Moon this debris is produced by impacts and covers the surface.
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Mantle of loose and weathered material overlying the bedrock.
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A sheet of loose particles covering the bedrock. It plays a vital role in plant growth by creating soil.
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The unconsolidated mantle of weathered rock, soil and superficial deposits overlying solid rock.
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loose soil on the Moon created by rocks hitting the surface at very high speed.
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deeply weathered bedrock produced by prolonged and intense decay of bedrock usually under tropical conditions. Remnants of preglacial regolith found in glaciated regions of Canada and Fennoscandinavia.
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The layer or mantle of fragmental and unconsolidated rock material, whether residual or transported, that covers the bedrock
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The layer of rocky debris and dust made by metoritic impact that forms the uppermost surface of planets, satellites and asteroids.
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A fine rocky layer of fragmentary debris (or dust) produced mainly by meteoroid collisions with the surface of the Moon.
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Any kind of unconsolidated debris that covers bedrock.
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The layer of loose rock resting on bedrock (sometimes called mantle rock), found on the Earth, the Moon, or a planet. Regolith is made up of soils, sediments, weathered rock, and hard, near-surface crusts. On the surface of the Moon, regolith is a fine rocky layer of fragmentary debris (or dust) produced mainly by meteoroid collisions.
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Loose material, such as dust and rock fragments, covering bedrock.
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a layer of soil and loose rock fragments overlying solid rock. [AHDOS
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Regoliths are the loose, fragmented mantle rock fragments (of various sizes) and dust on a planet, asteroid, or moon surface. On the Moon's surface, regolith was formed by the meteorite bombardments of the Moon's crust; is the rocky debris which is thrown out of impact craters.
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Regolith (Greek: "blanket rock") is a layer of loose, heterogeneous material covering solid rock. Regolith is present on Earth, the Moon, some asteroids, and other planets. The term was first defined by G.
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