But though rain, like rivers, is a carrier of soil, it is more. It
is a maker of soil, likewise; and by it mainly the soil of an upland
field is made, whether it be carried down to the sea or not.
If you will look into any quarry you will see that however compact
the rock may be a few feet below the surface, it becomes, in almost
every case, rotten and broken up as it nears the upper soil, till you
often cannot tell where the rock ends and the soil begins.
Now this change has been produced by rain. First, mechanically, by
rain in the shape of ice. The winter rain gets into the ground, and
does by the rock what it has done by the stones of many an old
building. It sinks into the porous stone, freezes there, expands in
freezing, and splits and peels the stone with a force which is slowly
but surely crumbling the whole of Northern Europe and America to
powder.
Do you doubt me? I say nothing but what you can judge of yourselves.
The next time you go up any mountain, look at the loose broken stones
with which the top is coated, just underneath the turf. What has
broken them up but frost? Look again, as stronger proof, at the
talus of broken stones--screes, as they call them in Scotland;
rattles, as we call them in Devon--which lie along the base of many
mountain cliffs.
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