| 1. | Bioturbation is central to the soil biomantle concept formulated in 1990.
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| 2. | Bioturbation is believed to account for the scarcity of internal bedding.
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| 3. | The zone of active bioturbation is termed the soil biomantle.
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| 4. | Phosphates that are in pristine conditions have not undergone bioturbation.
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| 5. | And what about ongoing bioturbation, the disturbance caused by roots and rodents?
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| 6. | This is helped by the extracting and reworking processes of phosphatic particles or bioturbation.
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| 7. | This burrowing is called bioturbation by sedimentologists.
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| 8. | In some places fossils or bioturbation occur.
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| 9. | The biomantle is the upper part of soil produced largely by biota, dominantly by bioturbation.
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| 10. | These organisms often also cause Bioturbation, which is commonly used interchangeably or in reference with bioirrigation.
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