Read the passage below and answer the questions that follow.
Erosion in nature is a beneficent process without which the world would have died long ago.
The same process, accelerated by human mismanagement, has become one of the most vicious and destructive forces that have ever been released by man. 'Geological erosion' or 'denudation' is an early and important process in soil formation, whereby the original rock material is continuously broken down and sorted by wind and water until it becomes suitable for colonization by plants.
Plants, by the binding effects of their roots, by the protection they afford against rain and wind and by the fertility they impart to the soil, bring denudation almost to a standstill. Nevertheless, some slight denudation is always occurring.
As each superficial film of plant-covered soil becomes exhausted it is removed by rain or wind, to be deposited mainly in the rivers and sea, and a corresponding thin layer of soil forms by slow weathering of the underlying rock.
The depth is sometimes only a few inches, occasionally several feet deep, but within it lies the whole capacity of the earth to produce life. Below that thin layer comprising the delicate organism known as soil is a planet as lifeless as the moon.
One important function of plant
A. denude the soil B. bind and fertilize the soil C. erode the soil to: D. look pretty