Calcium is the element that is the foundation of limestones. The skeletons and shells of animals are made of calcite, a common mineral formed by the uniting of carbon, oxygen, and calcium. Marbles are, perhaps, the most permanent form of the limestone rocks. "Hard" water has filtered through rocks containing calcite, and absorbed particles of this mineral. From water thus impregnated, all animal life on the earth obtains its bone-building and shell-building materials.

Carbon forms a large part of the tissues of plants and animals, and in the remains of these it is chiefly found in the earth's crust. When these burn or decay, the carbon remains as charcoal or escapes to the air in union with oxygen as the well known carbonic acid gas. This is one of the most important foods of plants. Joined with calcium it forms the mineral calcite, or carbonate of lime.

Hydrogen is one of the two gases that unite to form water. Oxygen is the other. Many kinds of rock contain a considerable amount of water. Surface water sinks into porous soils and rocks, and accumulates in pockets and veins which feed springs, and are the reserve water supply that keeps our rivers flowing, even through dry weather. More water is held by absorption in the earth's solid crust than in all the oceans and seas and great lakes.

Hydrogen, combined with carbon, occurs in solid rocks where the remains of plants and animals have slowly decayed. From such processes the so-called hydrocarbons, rock oil and natural gas, have accumulated. When such decay goes on above ground, these valuable products escape into the air. Marsh gas, whose feeble flame above decaying vegetation is the will-o'-the-wisp of swamps, is an example.

Magnesium, potassium, and sodium are found in equal quantities in the earth's crust, but never free. In union with chlorine, each forms a soluble salt, and is thus found in water. Common salt, chloride of sodium, is the most abundant of these. Water dissolves salt out of the rocks, and carries it into the sea. Clouds that rise by the evaporation of ocean water leave the salt behind, hence the seas are becoming more and more salty, for the rivers carry salt to the oceans, which hold fast all they get.

Phosphorus is an element found united with oxygen in the tissues of both plants and animals. It is most abundant in bones. Rocks containing fossil bones are rich in lime phosphates, which are important commercial fertilizers for enriching the soil. Beds of these rocks are found and mined in South Carolina and elsewhere.

Sulphur is well known as a yellow powder found most plentifully in rocks that are near volcanoes. It is a needed element in plant and animal bodies. It occurs in rocks, united with many different elements. In union with oxygen and a metal it forms the group of minerals called sulphates. In union with iron it forms sulphide of iron. The "fool's gold" which Captain John Smith's colonists found in the sand at Jamestown, was this worthless iron pyrites.

Chlorine is a greenish, yellow gas, very heavy, and dangerous to inhale. If it gets into the lungs, it settles into the lowest levels, and one must stand on one's head to get it out. As an element of the earth's crust it is not very plentiful, but it is a part of all the chlorides of sodium, magnesium, and potassium. In salt, it forms two per cent. of the sea water. It is much less abundant in the rocks.

To these elements we might add nitrogen, that invisible gas which forms nearly four-fifths of our atmosphere, and is a most important element of plant food in the soil. Most of the seventy elements are very rare. Many are metals, like gold and iron and silver. Some are not metals. Some are solid. A few are liquid, like the metal mercury, and several are gaseous. Some are free and pure, and show no disposition to unite with others. Nuggets of gold are examples of this. Some exist only in union with other elements. This is the common rule among the elements. Changes are constantly going on. The elements are constantly abandoning old partnerships and forming new ones. Growth and decay of plant and animal life are but parts of the great programme of constant change which is going on and has been in progress since the world began.