⟩ Do you know where did the first soils come from?
The first soils began to form as soon as parent material was available, either through deposition of particles by wind, water, ice, or gravity, or through weathering of rocks. One of the most important processes in topsoil formation is the accumulation of humus (organic matter) that occurs as plants grow, die, and are decomposed, and as earthworms, termites, ants, and other organisms rework the material. A by-product of this process is that individual particles are joined together to form aggregates. Aggregates are groups of individual soil particles held together by organic matter or other forces, and are the foundation of soil structure. At first, these changes may be rapid, but they tend to slow as time progresses. Soil scientists would expect more dramatic differences in the first 10 years after deposition, than in the next 10 years, than in the last ten years of the first century after the deposition, etc.