How many grains of sand are there on earth? That is a good question. But a ball-park estimate is fairly simple.
We will look at fine sand (grain size = 100 microns), and
coarse sand (grain size = 1 mm).
So a cubic mm can hold 1000 grains of fine sand, or 1 grain
of course sand. Obviously grain size is
important.
There are 1x1018 cubic millimeters in a cubic km.
How many cubic km of sand, sandstone, etc we have Is a
tricky question. But if we say the
average thickness of all sand for the globe is 200m (a thin number in any
sedimentary basin, but most of the Earth is not a basin in the traditional
sense. The surface area of earth is 5x10
8 km2, so a 0.2 km layer gives 10 8 cubic km of sand.
This brings the total grain count to somewhere between 103
x 10 18 x 10 8 = 10 29 for the fine sand, and
a thousand times less than that, or 10 26 grains of the coarse sand. If you want to know how that compares to the
number of stars in the sky, ask an astronomer.
If you felt like it, you could use this global sediment/sedimentary rock thickness map to calculate total sediment volume: http://igppweb.ucsd.edu/~gabi/sediment.html
ReplyDeleteBut, on average, 60% of the stratigraphic record is mudstone so, if focusing on sand/sandstone, you'd want to remove that component. I can't remember what the estimates of chemical sediments (carbonate, evaporites, etc.) are -- you'd want to account for those too.