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Different types of Soil

Alluvial Soil CE Masters

Different types of Soil


1. Bentonite Clay:

  • It is a type of clay with a very high percentage of clay mineral "Montmorillonite".
  • This soil is highly plastic has high water absorption properties, has high swelling and shrinkage potential.
  • It is formed due to the decomposition of volcanic ash.
  • It is used for drilling mud.
2. Black Cotton Soil: 
  • It is residual soil containing a high percentage of the montmorillonite mineral and has high swelling and shrinkage properties.
  • It has a very low bearing capacity.
  • The parent rock is Basalt or Trap (igneous rock).
  • It is generally dark in colour and cotton grows on this soil easily, hence the name Black cotton soil.

3. Loam Soil:

  • It is a mixture of sand, silt and clay and is also known as Garden Soil.

4. Indurated Soil:

  • The hardening of clay is due to heat and pressure.

5. Organic Soil:

  • The other mode of soil formation is by decomposition of vegetable matter, plants etc. by bacteria etc.
  • These lead to the formation of organic soil or clay.
  • These soils have characteristics of odour and colour.
  • It is also called " Cumulose Soils ". Ex:- Muck, Peat and Humus.
  • Muck- Organic matter + Inorganic matter.
  • Peat- Fully decomposed organic matter. (Highly Compressible and Fibrous.)
  • Humus- Partly decomposed organic matter, also known as Top Soil.
  • Organic Soil has poor engineering properties.
6. Gravel:
  • Gravel is a type of coarse-grained soil. The particle size ranges from 4.75 mm to 80 mm.
  • It is Cohesionless material.
7. Cobbles:
  • Cobbles are large size particles in the range of 80 mm to 300 mm.
8. Dune Sands:
  • These are wind-transported soils. These are composed of relatively uniform particles of fine to medium sand.
Note:
Lithification: It is the process of conversion of unconsolidated deposits into a hard rocky mass by compaction and cementation.


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