Alluvial soil definition

Alluvial soil means a soil developing from recently deposited alluvium and exhibiting essentially no horizon development or modification of the recently deposited materials.
Alluvial soil means a soil developing from recently deposited alluvium and exhibiting
Alluvial soil. Alluvial soil is mixed with scree and forms alluvium in most part of the land. At some places it is found upto 0.5 m to 3.0 m over mineralized zone. Weathered sandstone: It is lying over hard and compact sandstone and its thickness ranges from 1.0 to 3.0 m over mineralized zone. It is mixed with murram. Hard and Compact Sandstone: It is up to 4.0-20m thickness. This is a hard compact and requires blasting for fragmentation. This is considered as overburden.

Examples of Alluvial soil in a sentence

  • The Graypoint and ▇▇▇▇▇ Alluvial soil regimes provide the most valuable wildlife habitat when compared to agricultural productivity and the associated limitations for agricultural uses.

  • Alluvial soil formed by alluvial sediments is mainly present within the analyzed Works Contract.

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