The biosphere is the name biologists give to the
sort of skin on the surface of this planet that is inhabitable by living
organisms. Most land creatures occupy only the interface between the atmosphere
and the land; birds extend their range for a few hundred feet into the
atmosphere; burrowing invertebrates such as earthworms may reach a few yards
into the soil but rarely penetrate farther unless it has been recently disturbed
by men. Fish cover a wider range, from just beneath the surface of the sea to
those depths of greater than a mile inhabited by specialized creatures.
Fungi(真菌) and bacteria are plentiful in the atmosphere to a height of about half
a mile, blown there by winds from the lower air. Balloon exploration of the
stratosphere (同温层) as long ago as 1936 indicated that moulds and bacteria could
be found at heights of several miles, recently the USA’s National Aeronautics
and Space Administration has detected them, in decreasing numbers, at heights up
to eighteen miles. They are pretty sparse at such levels, about one for every
two thousand cubic feet, compared with 50 to 100 per cubic foot at two to six
miles (the usual altitude of jet aircraft), and they are almost certainly in an
inactive state. Marine bacteria have been detected at the bottom of the deep
Pacific trench, sometimes as deep as seven miles; they are certainly not
inactive. Living microbes have also been obtained on land from cores of rock
drilled (while prospecting for oil) at depths of as much as 1,200 feet. Thus we
can say, disregarding the exploits of astronauts, that the biosphere has a
maximum thickness of about twenty-five miles. Active living processes occur only
within a compass of about seven miles, in the sea, on land and in the lower
atmosphere, but the majority of living creatures live within a zone of a hundred
feet or so. If this planet were scaled down to the size of an orange, the
biosphere, at its extreme width, would occupy the thickness of the
orange-colored skin, excluding the pith. In this tiny zone of
our planet takes place the multitude of chemical and biological activities that
we call life. The way in which living creatures interact with each other, depend
on each other or compete with each other, has fascinated thinkers since the
beginning of recorded history. Living things exist in a fine balance which is
often taken for granted—for, from a practical point of view, things could not be
otherwise. Yet it is a source of continual amazement to scientists because of
its intricacy and delicacy. The balance of nature is obvious most often when it
is disturbed, yet even here it can seem remarkable how quickly it readjusts
itself to a new balance after a disturbance. The science of ecology—the study of
the interaction of organisms with their environment—has grown up to deal with
the minutiae of the balance of nature. The passage says that the biosphere ______.
A. extends only 1,200 feet below the earth’s surface
B. is about seven miles in width
C. is as much as twenty-five miles in thickness
D. is a zone only about one hundred feet wide