13 Nitty-Gritty Details on Sand

Can you eat sand? How much of sand is actually poop? Is stealing sand a crime? 

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Can you eat sand? How much of sand is actually poop? Is stealing sand a crime? 

1

You might think sand is beige—and boring. But sand comes in every colour. The black sand in Hawaii and Santorini has volcanic minerals mixed into it. Bermuda’s pink beaches get their colour from the red and pink shells of tiny marine creatures. Even rarer is green sand, whose colour comes from the mineral olivine; only a handful of beaches have enough of it to appear distinctly green. And on Rainbow Beach in Australia, the sand ­appears in more than 70 colours.

2

Sand can taste good. We think of it as the blanket covering a beach, but technically sand is any material made up of grains measuring six one-hundredths of a millimetre to two millimetres in diameter. With that definition, salt and sugar qualify.

3

The material we commonly think of as sand is silica—made up of quartz crystals that have broken down naturally. However, sand can form in the opposite way too: Tiny particles can get coated over in waters with high levels of calcium carbonate or other minerals, creating a special kind of sand grain called an oolith.

4

The stuff on the shores can come from a variety of sources, including from the poop of parrotfish, which eat algae and dead coral and excrete hundreds of pounds of sand a year. Sound gross? Perhaps, but the sand that comes out of parrotfish is what you’ll find on some of Hawaii’s most beautiful white sand beaches.

5

Still, most sand comes from granulated rocks that streams carry to the sea—some three billion tons of it each year. Yet we use 50 billion tons of sand around the world annually, to make paper, paint and the silicon chips that power computers. It’s also in construction materials such as concrete, brick and glass.

6

Depending on what’s in it, sand must be heated to more than 2,500°F [1,370°C] to become glass. The oldest (and fastest) glassmaker is lightning. When a bolt strikes d...

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