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James K
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In this world, a planet with very dense vegetation (earth-tropical-forest-like) and silica containing soil was attacked by spacehipsspaceships which fired very high energy laser beams across the planet's entire surface, effectively vitrifying it.

  • this planet's outer crust was only soil not solid rock or water, life developpeddeveloped thanks to underground water pockets (10 to 50 meters deep)
  • the first 8 to 15 meters of soil (depending on location) were fused into glass
  • all vegetation in this depth range was immediately incinerated
  • some of the plants used to reach down to 20 or 30 meters underground, and a lot of very resilient seeds were disseminated at these levels as well as volatile seeds in the atmosphere
  • all of those plants need sunlight and oxygen to develop, but seeds can stay in cryptobiotic-like stasis for as long as thousands of years

question: Could vegetation plausibly break the surface and grow again, after 1300 years time?

In this world, a planet with very dense vegetation (earth-tropical-forest-like) and silica containing soil was attacked by spacehips which fired very high energy laser beams across the planet's entire surface, effectively vitrifying it.

  • this planet's outer crust was only soil not solid rock or water, life developped thanks to underground water pockets (10 to 50 meters deep)
  • the first 8 to 15 meters of soil (depending on location) were fused into glass
  • all vegetation in this depth range was immediately incinerated
  • some of the plants used to reach down to 20 or 30 meters underground, and a lot of very resilient seeds were disseminated at these levels as well as volatile seeds in the atmosphere
  • all of those plants need sunlight and oxygen to develop, but seeds can stay in cryptobiotic-like stasis for as long as thousands of years

question: Could vegetation plausibly break the surface and grow again, after 1300 years time?

In this world, a planet with very dense vegetation (earth-tropical-forest-like) and silica containing soil was attacked by spaceships which fired very high energy laser beams across the planet's entire surface, effectively vitrifying it.

  • this planet's outer crust was only soil not solid rock or water, life developed thanks to underground water pockets (10 to 50 meters deep)
  • the first 8 to 15 meters of soil (depending on location) were fused into glass
  • all vegetation in this depth range was immediately incinerated
  • some of the plants used to reach down to 20 or 30 meters underground, and a lot of very resilient seeds were disseminated at these levels as well as volatile seeds in the atmosphere
  • all of those plants need sunlight and oxygen to develop, but seeds can stay in cryptobiotic-like stasis for as long as thousands of years

question: Could vegetation plausibly break the surface and grow again, after 1300 years time?

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user44285
user44285

Could vegetation potentially regrow on vitrified ground?

In this world, a planet with very dense vegetation (earth-tropical-forest-like) and silica containing soil was attacked by spacehips which fired very high energy laser beams across the planet's entire surface, effectively vitrifying it.

  • this planet's outer crust was only soil not solid rock or water, life developped thanks to underground water pockets (10 to 50 meters deep)
  • the first 8 to 15 meters of soil (depending on location) were fused into glass
  • all vegetation in this depth range was immediately incinerated
  • some of the plants used to reach down to 20 or 30 meters underground, and a lot of very resilient seeds were disseminated at these levels as well as volatile seeds in the atmosphere
  • all of those plants need sunlight and oxygen to develop, but seeds can stay in cryptobiotic-like stasis for as long as thousands of years

question: Could vegetation plausibly break the surface and grow again, after 1300 years time?