Environmental Sciences, asked by jast6834, 1 year ago

Mark and capture method doesn't work for which environment conditions

Answers

Answered by sandeep5318
0

Indian Standard Soil Classification System

Print this page

First | Last | Prev | Next

Classification Based on Grain Size

The range of particle sizes encountered in soils is very large: from boulders with dimension of over 300 mm down to clay particles that are less than 0.002 mm. Some clays contain particles less than 0.001 mm in size which behave as colloids, i.e. do not settle in water.

In the Indian Standard Soil Classification System (ISSCS), soils are classified into groups according to size, and the groups are further divided into coarse, medium and fine sub-groups.

The grain-size range is used as the basis for grouping soil particles into boulder, cobble, gravel, sand, silt or clay.

Very coarse soils

Boulder size

> 300 mm

Cobble size

80 - 300 mm

Coarse soils

Gravel size (G)

Coarse

20 - 80 mm

Fine

4.75 - 20 mm

Sand size (S)

Coarse

2 - 4.75 mm

Medium

0.425 - 2 mm

Fine

0.075 - 0.425 mm

Fine soils

Silt size (M)

0.002 - 0.075 mm

Clay size (C)

< 0.002 mm

Gravel, sand, silt, and clay are represented by group symbols G, S, M, and C respectively.

Physical weathering produces very coarse and coarse soils. Chemical weathering produce generally fine soils.

First | Last | Prev | Next

Similar questions