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Cec 108

The document provides an overview of geology and soil mechanics. It describes the physical structure of the Earth including the crust, mantle, core, atmosphere, hydrosphere, and biosphere. It then discusses the different types of rocks including igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks. Finally, it covers various geological structures, surface processes like weathering and erosion, and how engineering geology relates to civil engineering structures like dams, tunnels, and construction projects.

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Ernie Enokela
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
161 views48 pages

Cec 108

The document provides an overview of geology and soil mechanics. It describes the physical structure of the Earth including the crust, mantle, core, atmosphere, hydrosphere, and biosphere. It then discusses the different types of rocks including igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks. Finally, it covers various geological structures, surface processes like weathering and erosion, and how engineering geology relates to civil engineering structures like dams, tunnels, and construction projects.

Uploaded by

Ernie Enokela
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 48

WEEK ONE ( 1 )

Soil Mechanics and Geology Nature of earth crust

Sourth America
Ocean @ Crust
Equatorial
Indenosia
Core
Indian ocean
Atlantic Ocean

The earth can be physically described as a ball of rock (crust or lithosphere) partly

covered by water (hydrosphere) and rapt in an envelop of air (atmosphere). To this (3)

physical zone, it is convenient to add biological zones (biosphere) which are in the outer

zones of earth.

OUTER ZONES OF EARTH

(1) THE ATMOSPHERE: - It is a layer of gases and vapour which envelopes the earth.

Geologically is important as the climate and weather.

(2) THE HYDROSPHERE:-These include all the natural water of the, ie oceans, seas,

lake, and river which cover about ¾ of the earth surfaces.

(3) BIOSPHERE: - This consists of great forest with countless swarms of animal and

insect.

(4) THE CRUST OR LITHOSPHERE: - Is the outer shell of the solid earth. It is made up of rock in
great variety on the land it up most layer is commonly a blanket of soil or other

deposit ie, desert sand.

The crust and inner zones of the earth

-- The diagram in fig 1 shows the equation section through the earth.

1
-- The deep interior is called the core which has metallic properties and a very high

density.

-- The surrounding zone of heavy rocks is known as the mantle or substratum up to a

boundary surface about which the rocks have physical properties which are different

which of mantle.

-- The dominant rocks occurring in the crust fall into two contrasted groups.

I) A group of light rocks granite and related types and sediment such as sand stones and

shakes formerly and assemblish with an average specific density of about 2.7.

ii) A group of dark and heavy rock consisting mainly of basalt related types with density

about 2.8 3.0 known as basic rocks.

The continent, them selves have a varied relief of plains, plateaus and mountain ranges,

the last rising to a maximum high of 29028 feet above sea level which is known as mount

eve rest.

MINERIALS

These are natural in organics substance having composition and regular structure to be

which it’s crystalline form is related.

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTIIC OF MINERALS

Some element e.g gold, copper, sulphur and carbon (diamond and graphite) make

minerals by them selves but most minerals are compound of two or more elements.

Oxygen is by far the most abundant element in the rock, silicon is the most abundant

element after oxygen, not surprising that silicon should be the most abundant of all

oxygen in familiar as quartz a common mineral which is specifically characteristics of


granite, sandstone and quartz veins.

In the earities of mineral veins, quartz can be found as clear transparent prisms.

Diamond and graphite (coal) are both crystalline form of carbon for responding to the

2
contrasted physical properties one been hard and lorilliant the other soft opaque and

flaky. The crystals of diamond and graphite have very different lattice structure.

ROCK

These are molten magma the erupts from the heated region of the molten or cooling a

solidify to massive rock substance.

These are form as a result of volcanic activity which are generated in the molten or exceptionally heated
region or the crust it self. Naturally not all the magma reaches the surface and the new rock formed in the
crust by the consolidation of such magma are the

example of what are called intrusive rock.

TYPES OF ROCKS

The geologist distinguishes between three basic types of rock.

(1) Igneous Rock;- These were formed when molting magmas from interior of the earth

erupt and are forced to the surface, increasing the earth surface, the magma cooled down to form a solid
mass of crystal. The igneous rocks are therefore hard and massive.

Example of the rock is granite stone.

(2) Sedimentary Rock; - These are formed mainly by deposition under water in seas and

lakes. These are also formed by weathering and erosion or older mountain. Examples of

the rocks are chalk, lime stone, sand stone, and loose soil. Such as sand and gravel are

also described as sedimentary rocks.

Metamorphic Rock; - These are either igneous or sedimentary in origin whose

have uttered as a result of intense pressure and physical change. Examples of the rocks

are slate, schist and gneiss.

Common Rock Forming Minerals

These take the form of chemical decomposition some or the entire mineral constituent of

the rock mass. For example carbon dioxide dissolve in water to form weak solution of

carbonic acid which will attack many of the carbon rock forming mineral or oxygen in
atmosphere and in rain will cause oxidation particularly of those rocks containing iron.

3
The among rock forming minerals, there chemical composition, there susceptibity to

chemical weathering and the principal soil product are as follow


STRUCTURE OF GEOLOGY

Joint; - these are fracture along which particularly no displacement of the rock support.

These are common feature in granite rock formation.

Dip & Strike; - The dip include both direction of the maximum slope dawn a bending

plane and the angle between maximum slope and the horizontal.

The strike of an incline bend is the direction of any horizontal link along the bending

plane with still water ground.

Folds; - These occurs when bucking, bending and contortion of rocks by a group of

complex processes involving fracture, sliding sherry and flowage

Thrust; - This occur when the resulting fraction is in clinked at an angle between 45% and the horizontal.

Surface processes

Denudation;- This is the processes which act the crust at or very near its surface, as a

result of the movements and chemical activities of air, water, ice and living organisms.

Agent of Denudation

1) Wind;- Blowing over lands the wind comes with its dust and sand.

2) Rain & River;- Shower of rain sinks into the soil and promote the work of decay by

solution and by loosing the particles.

3) Glaciers (moving ice);- Water expand on freezing and through repeated alternation of

frost and thaw in water filled pores and cracks the rock are relentlessly broken.

4) Animals and organism;- Life also co-operates in the work of destruction the roots of

trees grown down into the crack and assist in splitting up the rocks, warms and burrowing

animals bring up the finer particles of soil to the surface, where they fall a ready prey to

wind and rain.

4
The production of rock waste by these various agents, partly by mechanical breaking and partly by solution
and chemical decay is described as weathering.

Product Denudation;- Sands, dusts, rocks, minerals substance i.e. Tin, Diamond, coal etc.
Winds, river and glaciers, the agent that carry the product of rock waste are

known as transporting agent.

The destructive processes are due to the effects of the transporting agent are described as

erosion.

Types of Erosion

1) Rain Erosion;- The effect of rain water contribute to soil removal, but where the soil

has a strong cover of vegetation and particularly if it firmly bounds together by a mat of

interlacing grass roots it is well protected against rapid surface erosion.

2) Gully Erosion;- This is formed by large deep trench at the slope-end of hill side due to

high run-off result of high rainfall.

3) River Erosion;- This leads to hydraulic lifting and scouring cavitations.

4) Glacier Erosion;- this is limited to sub-glacier streams.

5) Wind Erosion;- Slowing off a fine sand.

6) Marine Erosion;- The effect of sea and ocean wave, tides and current.

RRELEVANCE OF ENGINEERING GEOLOGY TO CIVIL ENGINEERING


STRUCTUER

These are carried out to select the best location for a project site and to aid in

formulating the preliminary design or the structure .i.e. Dam project, uniting e.t.c.

(1) Investigation;- This involve surface and deep surface investigation to collect rock

( 2) sample, soil sample, inspection of rock curt and other excavations location of construction materials.

An important example is the construction of dam, reservoirs in which the following

information are needed for safety design.


(i) To ascertain bed of in fragmented rock base formation.

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(ii) Remove of any pervious material within the dam length which might case failure .i.e.

(iii) Minimize sea page in soil by constructing curt off well.

(vi) Clay are normally used as materials for construction of a dams because of its relative

low rate of permeability.

In the case of tunnel construction, drilling of bore holes, are carried out which will reveal

various information as follows.

(1) Measurement of fracture and joint fomentation in rocks.

(2) Rock names and description of various engineering properties .i.e. attraction laying

and other geologic effects.

(3) Location and amount of water and gas in flow.

(4) Geological seismic method may be used to define the thickness of loosened rock

around the tunnel. This can also be used on the ground surface to define the approximate

depth of bed rock or various rock-layers.

SURFSCE DRAINAGE AND GROUND WATER LOWERING (DEWATERING) IN SOIL

Depending on the modern of construction and their function drains can be classified as

surface and sub surface types, surface drains are usually shallow and are effective in

disposing the surface run-off (storm or inigation).


Subsurface drains are depth and usually meant for the under drainage of infiltrating

water. The technique for dealing with the problem those results is depending on the

occupation dimensions the soil types and the ground water control requirements.

SURFACE DRAINAGE

For an effective drainage system to be carried the following investigation are needed.

(1) Topography; - The topography of the area will indicate the ridge and valley lines and

the direction of the natural surface run-off.

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(2) The soil; - soil characteristics are vital to any form of drainage to be designed.

(2) Ground water information; - This will enable the designer to known the water logging
(3) areas and point of high water table.

TYPES OF DRAINAGE

(1) Storm or inigation run-off follows the natural valley lines which can be easily found

the contour map of the areas.

(2) Open drains;-

These types of open drains are constructed at the side of road embankments.

(3) Close drains; - This consist of open-jointed pipes made of ultrified clay a of concrect.

7
WEEK TWO ( 2 )

GROUND WATER LOWERING (DEWTEARING

The following method are used to lower the ground water (dewater) on sites.

(1) Caissons method; - This involve excavation form within the permanent impervious

structures. The structure is either built in place if the site in an land or floated into

position if the site is in water the structure or partial structure is in position, excavation

form within begins. As excavation proceeds the structure sinks due to its own weight, that

may be added, and the process is continued until final foundation elevation is reached.

COFFERDAMS; - These are structure build in place to exclude water and earth from

an excavation. In those instances where the distance across the excavation is sufficiently

small to permit internal bracing, single-walled coffer dam construction is used. These are

normally used for bridge pier foundations.

Slurry French method; - The method involves construction an imperious bonier beneath

the ground surface. As excavation for the wall is progressing, the material removed: the

slurry is sufficient to support the excavation walls. When the excavation has been

competed concrete placement proceeds by the tremor method from the button to the top

of the excavation the slurry displaced by this by this operation is collected for reuse.

When the concrete has ared. The construction site is enclosed within a rigid impervious

barrier.

Grouting; - These are used in permanent work to construction offs for ground water and sometimes
have been employed as construction aids in dewatering. The processes involve

injection of chemical or cement grounds into the voids of pervious soil when these

ground solidify, they form an impervious barrier. The success of the operation will depend on the
distribution of the ground injection.

Open sumps; - This is sample and cheap are can be carried onto with very planning. It is

8
well suited to some situation .i.e. types of soils; in cohesive soil supping method work

best these are soils that are nearly impervious.

The procedure above illustrates the button of an excavation area which is graded to drain

to a central location where pumps are installed.

Cohesion less soil; - are usually of sufficiently high permeability that the success of a

supping operation will depend on the acceptability of comparatively large pumped

capacities and certain problem that may arise from movement of soil particle to the

sumps.

Well point; - A well point dewatering system consist of a series of closed spaced small-

diameter well drain to shallow depts. These wells are connected to a pipe or header that

the excavation and that is attached to a vacuum pump.

NEUTRAL AND RFFRCTIVE STRESS

At any horizontal section dept Z in a soil profile, the total douched pressure is due to the

weight. Soil above the section.Resistance to this pressure is provided, partly be the soil

grains (which is the effective stress) and if the section is below the water table partly by

the upward pressure of the water, which is the neutral stress or pure water pressure.

IMPORTANT OF DRAINAGE

(1) To prevent water logged area.

(2) This on able construction activities to be carried out with ease.


(3) To prevent destruction of structure .i.e. roads, buildings etc.

(4) Effective use of the land area.


ISOSTASY

When a mountain range is cured into peaks and valleys and gradually worm down by the

agents of denudation, reduced by the weight of the rock-waste that has been carried away.

At the same time a neighboring column under laying a region of delta and sea floor where

9
the rocks waste is being deposited receive a correspond in crease of load, unless a

compensating transfer of material occurs in depth, the two columns can be remain in

isostalic equilibrium. At the base of the crust the pressure exerted by the banded column

is increase, while that exerted by the un banded column is decrease. In response to this

pressure difference in the mantle a slow migration of material in set going which leads to

the loaded column to sick and the un banded column to rise. This process is referred to as

isostalic readjustment.

EARTH QUAKE

When a stone is thrown into pool of water, a series of waves spreads through the water in

all directions similarly when rocks are suddenly disturbed, vibration. Spread out in all

direction of the source of the disturbance. There fore an earthquake is the passage of

these vibrations. Those are set up in solid bodies by the scraping together of two rough

blow or rupture surface. Corresponding cause of earth quake in the earth is crust volcanic explosion, the
initiation of faults and the movement of rock along fault planes.

Tectonic movement of earth quake

Is the building up of stresses in rock until they are strained to breaking point, when they

suddenly rupture and more generally along fault.

Effect of earth quake

One of the most alarming features of a great earthquake experienced on land near the

place of origin to the passage of ground land waves which are thrown the surface in to

ever changing undulation which lead to destruction of:

(a) Structure builds across a fault.

(b) Water pipes and gas pipes are cracked open as well as road.

(c) Railways are buckled and twisted bridge collapse and building crash to the ground.

(d) Glaciers are shattered and where they terminate and break off in the sea ice beings

10
because unusually abundant.

(e) Ground water its circulation may be greatly disturbed in other ways by earthquakes.

(f) Loss of human life as a result of collapse of building in highly populated areas.

Continental Drift and ocean .

WEEK THREE ( 3 )

Geological maps

Topographic Map

In addition to showing general locations and political boundaries, topographic maps depict the geology and

special features of an area. This type of map offers many advantages. For instance, most backpackers use

topographic maps to navigate through wilderness, planning their routes with obstacles and landmarks in

mind. If they should get lost, they can find their bearings again by aligning their map and compass to a

prominent feature observed nearby. A key on each map indicates the distance scales and special symbols

(for features such as railroads, schools, airstrips and water towers) used to create it. Generally, the green

on a topographic map indicates forest or vegetation, while the white areas indicate areas that are bare of

growth. Series of brown lines indicate mountains and hills, showing elevation and relative steepness. Each

line represents a specific unit of elevation; where the lines are very close together, the terrain is quite

steep.

I. Applying a scale

11
Example: Bernard wants to make a plan of his bedroom; it is rectangular and is 5 m long and 2.50 m
wide.
He decides to divide the real dimensions by 20:
5 m = 500 cm and 500 cm ÷ 20 = 25 cm; 2.5 m = 250 cm and 250 ÷ 20 = 12.5 cm. So he draws a
rectangle with a length of 25 cm and a width of 12.5 cm.

This rectangle is a plan of his room to the scale of .


Note: The dimensions of the plan are the real dimensions multiplied by the scale factor of

; in fact: and ;
the dimensions of the plan are proportional to the real dimensions; the scale factor is

.
Definition: On a map (or a plan), the dimensions are equal to the real dimensions multiplied by
the same number e. The number e is called the map scale. If D is a real distance that is
represented on the map by a distance d, then D × e = d (the distances must be expressed in the
same unit).

II. Calculating a scale

Example 1: What is the scale e of the architectural plan mentioned in the introduction (12 meters
represented by 48 centimeters)? So: D = 12 m = 1,200 cm and d = 48 cm.

So: 1,200 × e = 48, or (simplifying by 48).

The scale of the plan is equal to .

Note: ; we can also say that the scale factor is equal to 0.04, but it is usual, where possible, to write the
scale as a fraction with a numerator of 1 when the scale is less than 1.
Example 2: On a road map, a straight road 1 kilometer (km) long is represented by 1 cm.
What is the scale of this map?
So: D = 1 km = 100,000 cm and d = 1 cm. We can call the scale of the map e.

So: 100,000 × e = 1, or .

The scale of the map is equal to .


Example 3: Using a microscope, you photograph a paramecium that is 0.2 millimeters (mm) long. On the
photograph, the paramecium is 10 cm long. What is the scale of this photograph?
So: D = 10 cm = 100 mm and d = 0.2 mm. We can call the scale of the photograph e. So: 0.2 × e = 100,
or e = 100 ÷ 0.2 = 500.
The scale of the photograph is equal to 500.
Note: In this example, the photograph is an enlargement; this is because the scale is greater than 1.
III Using a scale

A. Example 1: calculating a real distance

Look again at the second example given in the introduction. What is the distance that

Peter must cover (the distance represented by 5 cm on a map with a scale of ?

We apply the formula D × e = d, with and d = 5 cm.

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So: , or D = 5 × 25,000 = 125,000.
Therefore D = 125,000 cm = 1.25 km. Peter must cover
1.25 km.

B. Example 2: calculating a reduced length

On the same map, how is a path 750 m long represented?

We apply the formula D × e = d, with and D = 750 m.

So: , therefore d = 0.03 m = 3 cm.

On the map with a scale of , a path 750 m long is represented by 3 cm.

I. What is a scale?

A. Examples and definition

On a map drawn to the scale of , the distances are 10,000,000 times smaller than the real distances.

To draw it, the real distances are multiplied by , which is the same as dividing them by 10,000,000.
In the same way, on a reproduction of an insect to the scale of 15, the insect is represented 15 times larger
than in reality. To draw it, the real dimensions of the insect are multiplied by 15.
Definition: The scale of a reproduction is the number by which the real dimensions are multiplied.
Note:
A scale factor is always a positive number;
the scaled measurements are proportional to the measurements in reality; usually, a reducing scale is
written as a fraction, but it does not have to be; so the scale can also be written in decimal format as
0.0000001.
B. A little history

The first map of the whole kingdom of France was created at the request of Louis XV, who was
impressed by the mapmaking carried out in Flanders. César-François Cassini de Thury, also known as
Cassini III, was asked to complete this map on a scale of 1/86,400. The map was based on the grid
network created between 1683 and 1744 by his father and grandfather.
The survey began in 1760 and was completed by his son Jacques Dominique Cassini in 1789. The
publication of the maps was delayed by the French Revolution and was not completed until 1815. Four
generations of Cassinis were devoted to the creation of this map, which was used as a reference by the
cartographers of the principal European nations throughout the first half of the 19th century.

II. How is a scale used?

A. If the scale is given by a number

Go back to the example of the map created to the scale of .


To draw this, the real distances—for example the distance from Paris to Rome as the

crow flies—are all multiplied by the same number, here .

13
The distance between Paris and Rome as the crow flies is around 1,200 kilometers (km).
The two towns are therefore 0.00012 km apart on the map (since
1,200 × 0.0000001 = 0.00012). This distance is expressed in kilometers, which is not a very convenient
unit to use for a map; converting it into centimeters, it is 12 cm. In the case of the reproduction of an
insect, the real dimensions (for example, the length of a leg) are all multiplied by the same number: 15.
A leg that actually measures 5 millimeters (mm) will measure 75 mm on the drawing, that is, 7.5 cm
(15 × 5 = 75). B. If the scale is given by a comparison of two lengths

For some maps and plans, the scale is given like this: 1 cm to 25 km, or 1 cm to 350 meters (m), etc.
In the first case, 25 km on the ground is represented by 1 cm on the map. So, if something measures 10
cm on the map, the distance on the ground will be 250 km (10 × 25 = 250). In general, if n is a positive
number, a distance of n cm on the map represents a real distance of 25 × n km on the ground.

WEEK FOUR ( 4 )

Denudation;

Leaving the parched grassland of white-owned farms, we crossed into the

homeland—and total denudation. Most of the cattle had starved long ago; even the land's

few goats were gaunt. I stopped at Thoma, a dusty village of thatch-roofed rondavels and

empty cattle kraals, and talked with Mphephu Shibambu, mother of five.

Types of weathering;
Most soils begin to form when big rocks break up. The breaking up of rocks is called weathering.

Weathering makes pieces of rock smaller and smaller. There are two kinds of weathering, physical

weathering and chemical weathering. After weathering breaks up rocks, a process called erosion spreads

the broken bits about.

WHAT CAUSES WEATHERING?

Most physical weathering is caused by ice. Ice is frozen water, and water expands when it freezes.

Freezing water makes a powerful force. When water seeps into cracks in rocks and freezes, it can split

the rock apart. Strong winds and growing tree roots can also break up rocks.

Water causes most chemical weathering. Chemical weathering changes the materials that make up rocks.

Rain pours down on rocks, rivers flow over rocks, and waves pound rocks along beaches. The water

takes certain minerals out of rocks. For example, grains of sand form after water takes a mineral called

feldspar out of granite rock.

14
WHAT DOES EROSION DO?

Erosion also makes soil. Erosion can help break up rocks, but it mainly moves weathered rock. Water,

wind, and glaciers cause erosion. Wind or water can wear away rock on a hillside. Water moves the

eroded rock down the hill. Wind blows dust away. Glaciers are big sheets of ice that move over land.

The moving ice grinds up and carries the rocks below it.

HOW FAST DOES SOIL FORM?

Most soils form very slowly. It can take as long as a million years for weathering to break down some

rocks.

Chemical weathering works faster in warm, wet climates than in cool, dry climates. Also, plant and

animal parts decay and make humus faster. Soils that form in warm, wet climates are usually better for

growing plants. Physical weathering is the main type of weathering in cool, dry climates.

Most soils begin to form when big rocks break up. The breaking up of rocks is called weathering.

Weathering makes pieces of rock smaller and smaller. There are two kinds of weathering, physical

weathering and chemical weathering. After weathering breaks up rocks, a process called erosion spreads

the broken bits about.

WEEK FIVE ( 5 )

Geological Factors affecting the stability of slopes’ cutting and embankment.

Although nonscientists were distressed at the inability of geologists and volcanologists to

predict these events, forecasting eruptions of stratospheric volcanoes like Mount St.

Helens is quite different from forecasting eruptions of midocean shield volcanoes, like

Kilauea on the island of Hawaii. The latter type produce a very hot and highly fluid lava,

whose path to the surface can be monitored by the measurement of earthquake activity

and ground tilting, that is, changes in the slope of the ground caused by the penetration of

15
molten rock from below. In volcanoes like Mount St. Helens, a sluggish, thicker lava,

moving slowly toward the surface, plugs the throat of the volcano and effectively bottles

up all the gases from below, until the resulting pressure is released in an explosion

The Caribbean coast and eastern mountain slopes generally receive twice as much annual

Pacific slope is due to the presence of cold stable air caused by the cold California

Current. This current, much like the Peru, or Humboldt, Current along the Peruvian coast,

chills the air, thus preventing it from absorbing much water vapor and reducing the

possibilities for precipitation. In contrast, the effects of the warm water of the Caribbean

Sea allow the air to absorb abundant moisture, which is then carried by the prevailing

easterly winds. Much condensation and rainfall occur as the winds flow up and over the

high slopes of Central America. Rainfall is greatest along the Mosquito Coast of

easternmost Nicaragua—San Juan del Norte receives about 6,350 mm (about 250 in) of

rain per year.

Sledding Down a Snowy Slope


Three friends enjoy a sled ride down a snowy slope in the

Austrian Alps. The Alps are home to many winter resorts.

16
Faults;

Plates that slide past each other make breaks in the crust called faults. The edges of

sliding plates can get stuck together. The plates keep trying to move, and pressure builds

up. Suddenly, the plates break free. Plates that move suddenly can cause an earthquake.

The ground shakes. Earthquakes can damage houses and other buildings.

San Andreas Fault


Where Earth’s tectonic plates collide, great cracks called

faults are formed. The San Andreas Fault in California

marks where the North American and Pacific plates come


together.

WHAT ARE JOINTS?

17
Joints are the places where two or more bones meet. Most bones are tied together at joints by tough bands

called ligaments.

Different kinds of joints let you move in different ways. Move your lower arm up and down. Keep your

upper arm still. The joint that joins your upper and lower arm is called the elbow. Your elbow works like

a hinge. It lets you move your lower arm, but only up and down. Now swing your arm all around from

your shoulder. A joint in your shoulder called a ball-and-socket joint lets you move your arm in many

directions.

Your skull is made of many bones that do not move. They are held together in one solid piece by suture

joints.

Dike (geology), in geology, wall-like intrusion of igneous rock, cutting across other
strata

of preexisting rocks, originally formed by a flow of molten rock into a fissure in which it

cooled and solidified. A dike may range from a few centimeters to thousands of meters

thick and from a few meters to many kilometers long. Frequently the rock material of the

dike is harder than the surrounding rocks, and as a result it may be left standing by itself

after the neighboring rock has weathered away. Similar intrusions of igneous rock that lie

parallel to the enclosing layers are known as sills.

Levee, embankment along the course of a river. Natural levees are low banks that are produced by the

river during floods when the overflowing of the river decreases the speed of the water and permits the

deposit of silt. Artificial levees are considerably higher than natural ones and protect the surrounding

countryside from floods. Levees are, in general, similar to the protective dikes in the Netherlands that

prevent flooding by the sea. On a large river such as the Mississippi, floods cannot be controlled by

levees alone

because the waters rise to heights that would overwhelm any embankment. Levees are,

however, used to protect portions of the riverbank areas, such as cities and towns, that

18
have a high economic value. The floodwaters are allowed to flow through breaks in the

levees over land of low value and are drained off through supplementary channels that

are sometimes equipped with secondary levees

Geothermal reservoir;

In certain areas, water seeping down through cracks and fissures in the crust comes in

contact with this hot rock and is heated to high temperatures. Some of this heated water

circulates back to the surface and appears as hot springs and geysers. However, the rising

hot water may remain underground in areas of permeable hot rock, forming geothermal

reservoirs. Geothermal reservoirs, which may reach temperatures of more than 350° C

(700° F), can provide a powerful source of energy

WEEK SIX ( 6 )
6.0 SOIL MECHANICS

Soil mechanics is basically concerned with the behavour of performance of soils as they relate to design
of construction.

6.1 SOIL PROFILE

G.L

Top soil laterally 500mm


Hard part
The eng Sub – soil Is concern
G. W. L.
With this
Portion. SOIL
( eng. Soil )

BED - ROCK

6.2 ENGINEERING DEFINATION OF SOIL

For engineering purposes, soil is considered to any loose sedimentary deposit , such as

19
gravel , sand , silt , clay, or amixture of these materials . It should not be confused with

geological definition of soil , which is the weathered organic material on the surface or

topsoil. Topsoil is generally removed before any engineering projects are carried out.

Civil engineering is perhaps the broadest of the engineering fields, for it deals with the

creation, improvement, and protection of the communal environment, providing facilities

for living, industry and transportation, including large buildings, roads, bridges, canals,

railroad lines, airports, water-supply systems, dams, irrigation, harbors, docks, aqueducts,

tunnels, and other engineered constructions. The civil engineer must have a thorough

knowledge of all types of surveying, of the properties and mechanics of construction


materials, the mechanics of structures and soils, and of hydraulics and fluid mechanics.

Among the important subdivisions of the field are construction engineering, irrigation

engineering, transportation engineering, soils and foundation engineering, geodetic

engineering, hydraulic engineering, and coastal and ocean engineering

SOIL MECHANICS

6.3 Shaft for Sewer Constructed by Freezing.


In New York, contractors used freezing to dig a shaft for a sewer tunnel under the East

River. The tunnel is part of the collecting system which takes New York sewage to a

treatment plant in Brooklyn. The tunnel was bored through bedrock 225 ft. under the

river. The 26-ft. diameter shaft, however, extended through water-bearing ground for the

first 125 ft. of depth. The contractor chose to freeze the ground around the excavation by

driving a ring of 21 pipes to surround the work, and then circulating brine through them.

Two 125-hp. refrigerating plants were connected to the tops of the pipes. After several

weeks of continuous freezing, a solid wall of frozen wet ground dammed off the flow of

water. Excavation of the shaft was carried out inside the frozen ring by usual excavating methods. As
excavation proceeded, the shaft was lined with 3 ft. of reinforced concrete.

Ground Subsidence at Long Beach.

20
Officials of Long Beach, Calif., took steps to halt subsidence of the ground over Terminal

Island's 20-sq. mi. oil field. Since 1936, when the first oil well was drilled, over 800

million bbl. of oil have been pumped out of the oil-bearing strata. In 1941 surface sinking

was first noticed, and since then it has reached a total of over 20 ft. The major concern is

at the center of the area, where the Navy's $175 million shipyard and drydock, and the

Southern California Edison Co.'s steam generating plant are located. The $60 million

crash program, designed only to halt the subsidence, calls for injecting one million bbl. of

salt water a day through 260 water wells drilled into the strata, which lie at depths from

2,000 ft. to 6,000 ft. The injection of salt water is expected to greatly increase oil
recovery.

6.4 IRRIGATION AND POWER

6.4.1. Dams.
Hebgen Dam Withstands Earthquake.

Hebgen Dam, a 44-year-old earthfill power dam on the Madison River, west of

Yellowstone Park, was in the news in August. An earthquake of 7.8 intensity (the 1906

earthquake in San Francisco measured 8.2) rocked the region, wrecked paved highways,

caused landslides, killed a dozen people, and caused the water in the reservoir to slosh

over the top of the dam. Investigation after the quake showed an open crack in the

concrete core wall, but no leakage of water through the dam itself.

WEEK SEVEN ( 7 )

Different types of soil

As yet there is no worldwide, unified classification scheme for soil. Since the birth of the modern discipline of
soil science roughly 100 years ago, scientists in different countries have used many systems to organize the
various types of soils into groups. For much of the 20th century in the United States, for example, soil
scientists at the USDA used a classification scheme patterned after an earlier Russian method. This system
recognized some three dozen Great Soil Groups.

In 1975 a new classification scheme known as soil taxonomy was published in the United States and is now
used by the USDA. Unlike earlier systems, which organized soils according to various soil formation factors,

21
the new system emphasizes characteristics that can be precisely measured, including diagnostic horizons
(which give clues to soil formation), soil moisture, and soil temperature. In a manner similar to the kingdom,
phylum, class, order, family, genus, species system used to classify living things, the USDA soil taxonomy
employs six categories. From the general to the more specific, its categories are order, suborder, great group,
subgroup, family, and series. This system has classified more than 17,000 types of soil in the United States.

Sand is an important constituent of most soils and is extremely abundant as a surface deposit along the
courses of rivers, on the shores of lakes and the sea, and in arid regions (see Soil; see Soil Management).
One specific form of sand is the major ingredient in glassmaking. Other types of sand are used in
foundries to make casting molds and in ceramics, plasters, and cements. Sand is used as a grinding and
polishing abrasive in the form of sandpaper, which is a sheet of paper covered on one side with sand or a
similar abrasive substance. Sandblasting is an important technique used for cleaning stone or for
smoothing rough metal surfaces by blowing a stream of sand under air or steam pressure.

Sandstone, coarse-grained, sedimentary rock consisting of consolidated masses of sand deposited by


moving water or by wind. The chemical constitution of sandstone is the same as that of sand; the rock is
thus composed essentially of quartz. The cementing material that binds together the grains of sand is
usually composed of silica, calcium carbonate, or iron oxide. The color of the rock is often determined
largely by the cementing material, iron oxides causing a red or reddish-brown sandstone, and the other
materials producing white, yellowish, or grayish sandstone. When sandstone breaks, the cement is
fractured and the individual grains remain whole, thus giving the surfaces a granular appearance.
Sandstones of various geologic ages and of commercial importance are widely distributed in the U.S.
Besides serving as a natural reservoir for deposits of oil and gas, sandstone is used in building flagstone
pavings and in the manufacture of whetstones and grindstones.

Sandstone
Sandstone is a type of sedimentary rock made from accumulated particles of sand. The particles are deposited by water, galciers, or wind and are eventually
compressed and cemeted together to make sandstone. Sandstone comes in a variety of colors.

22
WEEK EIGHT ( 8 )

SOIL AGGREGATE
Individual soil particles tend to be bound together into larger units referred to as aggregates or soil peds.

Aggregation occurs as a result of complex chemical forces acting on small soil components or when

organisms and organic matter in soil act as glue binding particles together.

Soil aggregates form soil structure, defined by the shape, size, and strength of the aggregates. There are

three main soil shapes: platelike, in which the aggregates are flat and mostly horizontal; prismlike,

meaning greater in vertical than in horizontal dimension; and blocklike, roughly equal in horizontal and

vertical dimensions and either angular or rounded. Soil peds range in size from very fine—less than 1

mm (0.04 in)—to very coarse—greater than 10 mm (0.4 in). The measure of strength or grade refers to

the stability of the structural unit and is ranked as weak, moderate, or strong. Very young or sandy soils

may have no discernible structure.

POROSITY

The part of the soil that is not solid is made up of pores of various sizes and shapes— sometimes small

and separate, sometimes consisting of continuous tubes. Soil scientists refer to the size, number, and

arrangement of these pores as the soil's porosity. Porosity greatly affects water movement and gas

exchange. Well-aggregated soils have numerous pores, which are important for organisms that live in the

23
soil and require water and oxygen to survive. The transport of nutrients and contaminants will also be

affected by soil structure and porosity

MOISTURE CONTENT
Water occurs as moisture in the upper portion of the soil profile, in which it is held by

capillary action to the particles of soil. In this state, it is called bound water and has

different characteristics from free water See Soil; Soil Management. Under the influence

of gravity, water accumulates in rock interstices beneath the surface of the earth as a vast

groundwater reservoir supplying wells and springs and sustaining the flow of some

streams during periods of drought.

On striking the surface of the earth, the water follows two paths. In amounts determined

by the intensity of the rain and the porosity, permeability, thickness, and previous

moisture content of the soil, one part of the water, termed surface runoff, flows directly

into rills and streams and thence into oceans or landlocked bodies of water; the remainder

infiltrates into the soil. A part of the infiltrated water becomes soil moisture, which may

be evaporated directly or may move upward through the roots of vegetation to be

transpired from leaves. The portion of the water that overcomes the forces of cohesion

and adhesion in the soil profile percolates downward, accumulating in the so-called zone

of saturation to form the groundwater reservoir, the surface of which is known as the

water table. Under natural conditions, the water table rises intermittently in response to replenishment, or
recharge, and then declines as a result of continuous drainage into

natural outlets such as springs. See Spring.

WEEK NINE ( 9 )

SURFACE DRAINAGE AND WELLS

Drainage (geology), means by which water in an area drains, or flows away, in streams and rivers and by

seeping through the ground. A drainage system consists of all the bodies of water, including rivers, lakes

and groundwater (water under the ground), through which water flows. The water in drainage systems

24
originates as rain or as snow that subsequently melts. Most rain does not fall directly into river channels

or lakes. Instead, it falls on land, and much of this rain percolates into the ground. From there, most of it

flows through the upper soil layers and soon emerges and enters small streams. Scientists study drainage

patterns and drainage systems in an attempt to analyze the environmental impact of human activities and

natural processes on these systems. Human activities, such as damming rivers, draining wetlands for

development, and altering drainage patterns for agriculture or forestry use, may upset the balance of

nutrients, plants, and animals in the ecosystem. Natural processes, such as erosion (the removal of rock

and soil material), and deposition (the depositing of rock and soil material), may also be altered by

Stream Capture

Over time, a stream on the steep side of a mountain slope will erode the slope faster than a stream on the

less steep slope, and may erode the drainage divide that separates them. When the fast-eroding stream

erodes a notch in the drainage divide, it eventually takes over the headwaters of the slow-eroding stream

on the other side and “captures” it.

DRAINAGE PATTERN
A drainage pattern describes the characteristic way tributaries, or streams that feed other larger streams,

and rivers branch off in different directions. Drainage patterns assume many different forms, depending

largely on the geological structure of the rocks on which they form. The most common drainage pattern

is called dendritic. A dendritic drainage pattern tends to develop where a whole drainage basin is made

25
up of the same type of rock. Dendritic drainage resembles the shape of a tree, with the smallest

tributaries being the outermost twigs and the main river channel forming the trunk. In a dendritic

drainage pattern, tributary streams generally join at an acute, or less than 90 degree, angle, forming Y-

shaped junctions.

A rectangular drainage pattern is made of numerous cracks that form a grid pattern. This pattern is

common over certain types of rock, such as granite, in which cracks called joints develop to form a grid.

Stream channels tend to follow these joint systems. Radial drainage patterns occur where rivers flow in

all directions away from a raised feature. The raised feature may be a volcano or a mass of rock that is

more resistant to erosion than the surrounding rock and therefore stands high. Centripetal drainage is

found where rivers flow from surrounding high ground toward a central basin, which is often occupied

by a lake.

Spring (water), natural flow of water from the ground at a single point within a restricted area; when a

spring has no visible current, it is called a seep. Springs may emerge at different points on dry land or in

the beds of streams, ponds, or lakes. Cold spring waters are usually of meteorological character, that is,

rain that has soaked into the ground and emerged as a spring at some other point on a lower level. Hot

spring waters may be of igneous origin, or they may represent surface waters heated by contact with

underground uncooled igneous rock, as the hot springs and geysers at Yellowstone National Park. See

Geyser.

Classified according to their modes of origin, there are gravity springs, or those not confined by

impervious beds, and artesian springs, in which the water is under pressure because it is confined to a

pervious bed or a fissure (see Artesian Well). Grouped according to the nature of the water-conducting

passages, springs are of three types: (1) seepage, in which the water seeps out from sand and gravel; (2)

tubular, or those formed by tubular passages in glacial drift or easily soluble rocks; and (3) fissure, in

which the water issues along bedding, joints, faults, or cleavage planes. Pollution is likely where the

water flows, for some distance, in an underground channel way of somewhat open character.

The composition of spring water varies with the character of the surrounding soil or rocks. Volume of

flow of any given spring may vary with the season and amount of rainfall. Seepage springs often fail in

26
periods of drought or little rainfall. Nevertheless, some springs have a fairly constant and even large

volume of flow and may serve as sources of domestic or municipal water supply (see Water Supply and

Waterworks). Some springs are also of medicinal value because of the dissolved mineral substances

they contain (see Mineral Water; Water)

As the atmosphere warms, the surface layer of the ocean warms as well, expanding in volume and thus

raising sea level. The melting of glaciers and ice sheets, especially around Greenland, further swells the

sea. Sea level rose 10 to 25 cm (4 to 10 in) during the 20th century. (The range is due to measurement

uncertainties and regional variation.) By the end of the 21st century, sea level is projected to rise another

28 to 58 cm (11 to 23 in) if greenhouse gas emissions continue to increase significantly. The projection

is somewhat less—a rise of 19 to 37 cm (8 to 15 in)—for a scenario in which greenhouse gas emissions

peak around the year 2050 and then decrease. These projections do not incorporate possible large-scale

melting of the Greenland or Antarctic ice sheets, which could begin in the 21st century with warming of

a few degrees Celsius.

Rising sea level will complicate life in many island and coastal regions. Storm surges, in which winds

locally pile up water and raise the sea, will become more frequent and damaging. Erosion of cliffs,

beaches, and dunes will increase. As the sea invades the mouths of rivers, flooding from runoff will also

increase upstream.

WEEK TEN ( 10 )
GROUND WATER AND WELL

Groundwater, water found below the surface of the land. Such water exists in pores between sedimentary

particles and in the fissures of more solid rocks. In arctic regions, groundwater may be frozen. In general

such water maintains a fairly even temperature very close to the mean annual temperature of the area.

Very deep-lying groundwater can remain undisturbed for thousands or millions of years. Most

groundwater lies at shallower depths, however, and plays a slow but steady part in the hydrologic cycle.

27
Worldwide, groundwater accounts for about one-third of one percent of the earth's water, or about 20

times more than the total of surface waters on continents and islands. Groundwater is of major

importance to civilization, because it is the largest reserve of drinkable water in regions where humans

can live. Groundwater may appear at the surface in the form of springs, or it may be tapped by wells.

During dry periods it can also sustain the flow of surface water, and even where the latter is readily

available, groundwater is often preferable because it tends to be less contaminated by wastes and

organisms.

The rate of movement of groundwater depends on the type of subsurface rock materials in a given area.

Saturated permeable layers capable of providing a usable supply of water are known as aquifers.

Typically, they consist of sands, gravels, limestones, or basalts. Layers that tend to slow down

groundwater flow, such as clays, shales, glacial tills, and silts, are instead called aquitards. Impermeable

rocks are known as aquicludes, or basement rocks. In permeable zones, the upper surface of the zone of

water saturation is called the water table. When heavily populated or highly irrigated arid areas withdraw

water from the ground at too rapid a rate, the water table in such areas may drop so drastically that it

cannot be reached, even by very deep wells.

Although groundwater is less contaminated than surface waters, pollution of this major water supply has

become an increasing concern in industrialized nations. In the United States, many thousands of wells

have been closed in the late 20th century because of contamination by various toxic substances.

Soil scientists also characterize soils according to how effectively they retain and transport water. Once

water enters the soil from rain or irrigation, gravity comes into play, causing water to trickle downward.

Water is also taken up in great quantities by the roots of plants: Plants use anywhere from 200 to 1,000

kg (440 to 2,200 lb) of water in the formation of 1 kg (2.2 lb) of dry matter. Soils differ in their capacity

to retain moisture against the pull exerted by gravity and by plant roots. Coarse soils, such as those

consisting of mostly of sand, tend to hold less water than do soils with finer textures, such as those with

a greater proportion of clays.

28
Water also moves through soil pores independently of gravity. This movement can occur via capillary

action, in which water molecules move because they are more attracted to the pore walls than to one

another. Such movement tends to occur from wetter to drier areas of the soil. The movement from soil to

plant roots can also depend on how tightly water molecules are bound to soil particles. The attraction of

water molecules to each other is an example of cohesion. The attraction of water molecules to other

materials, such as soil or plant roots, is a type of adhesion. These effects, which determine the so- called

matric potential of the soil, depend largely on the size and arrangement of the soil particles. Another factor

that can affect water movement is referred to as the osmotic potential. The osmotic potential hinges on the

amount of dissolved salts in the soil. Soils high in soluble salt tend to reduce uptake of water by plant roots

and seeds. The sum of the matric and osmotic potentials is called the total water potential.

In soil, water carries out the essential function of bringing mineral nutrients to plants. But the balance

between water and air in the soil can be delicate. An overabundance of water will saturate the soil and

fill pore spaces needed for the transport of oxygen. The resulting oxygen deficiency can kill plants.

Fertile soils permit an exchange between plants and the atmosphere, as oxygen diffuses into the soil and

is used by roots for respiration. In turn, the resulting carbon dioxide diffuses through pore spaces and

returns to the atmosphere.

This exchange is most efficient in soils with a high degree of porosity. For farmers, gardeners,

landscapers, and others with a professional interest in soil health, the process of aeration—making holes

in the soil surface to permit the exchange of air—is a crucial activity. The burrowing of earthworms and

other soil inhabitants provides a natural and beneficial form of aeration.

WATERTABLE

Water Table, underground border between the ground in which all spaces are filled with water and the

ground above in which the spaces contain some air. The level of the water table tends to follow the shape

of the overlying ground surface, rising under hills and dipping in valleys, but with a gentler slope than

29
the ground. The level of the water table also varies with the climate, rising during rainy periods and

falling during dry spells. Wells dug down to below the water table will fill with water. Such wells

provide 20 percent of the drinking water used in the United States today.

The water table forms when rainwater seeps into the soil or bedrock instead of evaporating back to the

atmosphere or flowing directly into a stream as surface runoff. Most soils and many rocks are both

porous and permeable. Porous materials have openings, such as cracks, voids, and spaces between

particles, that can contain water. These openings are called pores. Permeable materials are materials that

allow water to flow through them. At shallow depths, the pores are filled with a mixture of air and

water. This region constitutes the zone of aeration, or unsaturated zone. Water percolating downward

eventually fills all available pore space below a certain level, forming the saturated zone. The surface, or

border, between the zone of aeration and the saturated zone is the water table. Surface tension can cause

water to rise a short distance from the water table. This produces a transition zone between the saturated

and unsaturated zone called a capillary fringe (see Capillary Action).

Water in the saturated zone is referred to as groundwater. Some soils and sedimentary rocks are so

porous that water can occupy up to 40 percent of their volume. As depth increases, high pressures

squeeze the pores shut. As a result, almost all groundwater is found in the top 8 km (5 mi) of the earth’s

crust. Groundwater contains about one-third of 1 percent of the earth’s water, or about 20 times more

than the total found in rivers and lakes. (The oceans account for 97 percent of the earth’s water.)

An aquifer is a body of rock or soil that is sufficiently porous and permeable to store and transfer

significant amounts of groundwater. An aquiclude is a body of relatively impermeable rock. An aquifer

is called confined when it is bounded above and below by aquicludes or unconfined when there is no

aquiclude above it. A perched aquifer is a body of groundwater that lies above the regional water table

because it is underlain by a small aquiclude. The top of this small zone of saturation is known as a

perched water table.

Water flows in and out of aquifers as part of the water cycle. The flow of water into aquifers is called

recharge and the flow of water out of aquifers is called discharge. The places where recharge occurs are

called recharge areas. Discharge occurs wherever the ground dips down to the level of the water table.

30
For example, springs occur in valleys where the valley sides meet the water table. If an enclosed

depression in the earth dips below the water table, water can flow out of the saturated zone and into the

depression, forming a lake or pond.

When recharge is equal to discharge, the water table is stationary. Heavy rainfall or spring melt can

cause recharge to temporarily exceed discharge and the water table will rise. A rising water table may

produce temporary springs, streams, and ponds. These temporary discharge areas then drain water from

the aquifer and lead to a restoration of the original level of the water table.

If a well is dug down below the level of the water table, it will start to fill with water. As water is

removed from the well, the water table surrounding the well will drop, forming a cone-shaped depression

in the water table. The depth and steepness of the cone of depression depend on how fast the water is

being withdrawn, how porous and permeable the aquifer is, and how fast the aquifer is being recharged.

If the water table drops below the bottom of a well, the well will run dry. Many of the major aquifers

throughout the world are being drained faster than they recharge. If this trend continues, many wells will

run dry.

Withdrawing groundwater faster than it can be recharged can also lead to subsidence, or sinking, of the

land. Parts of the Imperial Valley in California have subsided more than 8 m (26 ft) and New Orleans,

Louisiana, and Houston, Texas, have each subsided by about 2 m (about 7 ft) due to groundwater

withdrawal. Subsidence is irreversible. Once the land has settled and collapsed its pore space, the space

is no longer available to hold groundwater. Subsidence is a special concern in coastal areas that could

sink below sea level.

Any human activity that reduces recharge contributes to the lowering of the water table.

For example, the construction of impermeable surfaces, such as roads, parking lots, and buildings,

reduces recharge during heavy rain. These structures reduce the amount of ground through which rain

can percolate, so excess water flows

WEEK ELEVEN ( 11 )
Use of spring and piston analogy to substantiate neutral and effective stresses.

31
When a saturated soil mass is subjected to a load increment , the load is usually carried

initially by the water in the pores because the water is incompressible in comprism with

the soil structure . The pressure which results in the water because of the load increment

is named ‘’ hydrostatic excess pressure ‘’ because it is in excess of that pressure due to

weight of water. As the water drains from the soil pores , the load increment is shifted to

the soil structure . The transference of load is accompanied by a change in the volume of

soil equal to the volume of water drained . This process is known as ‘’ consolidation ‘’

We can be aided in understanding the consolidation process by the spring analogy shown

in fig . below . The saturated soil element is represented by fig. a , in which the spring

corresponds to the soil structure and the water to the soil pore water. If a weight W is

placed on thethe water and spring with the valve y closed ( fig . a ) , the weight is aimost

entirely carried by the water , since it is incompressible as comparedto the spring . Valve

y is opened and the water is allowed to escape , the load will eventually be carried

entirely by the spring ( fig. c ) . The elapsed time required to transfer the load increment

W from the water spring depends on how rapidly the water is permitted to escape through valve y . The
rate at which te volume change , or consolidation , occurs in a soil is

directly related to the permeability of the soil because the permeability controle the

speed at which the pore water can escape . Thepermeability of most sands is so high that

the time required for consolidation after a load application can be considered negligible

except for cases where a large mass of sand is subjected to a rapid shear or shock ( This

is discussed ). On the other hand , the low permeability of clay makes the rate of volume

change after a load application a factor which must be considered .

32
W
Y
W
Y W

Fig 11.a b c
Spring anology

WEEK TWELVE ( 12 )

12.0 Stress Distribution in Soil due to point loads;


Boussinesq’s Theory

Boussinesq’s stress distribution theory is based on the results given by the mathematical

theory of elasticity for the simplest case of loading of a solid , homogeneous , elastic –

isotropic, semi fininite medium ; namely , the case of a single vertical point load applied

at apoint on the horizontal boundary plane . In this case of soil , the horizontal boundary

plane would be the ground surface.

О P

R FIG.12.1 Action of a point load

M ү
Z

33
R = Acos β
R2

56

 P

I =Acos2 βi
R

Z FIG. 12.2 Radial stresse


s under the
action of point load.

34
Y
Β

R Z FIG. 12.3 Componentsstresse


for
a planeparallel to a boundary.

X
Z
57
12.1 If a Number of point load s is applied such as p1,p2,and p3 the surface of the soil then
compressive stress at any point of the soil.

P1 p2 p3
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// r1

r2
Z

r3

FIG. 12.4 Action of a number of point load .

AAAAAAAA A
AAAA A
35
Stress distribution of a uniformly loaded .

dz z

58
WEEK THIRTEEN ( 13 )

13.0 CLAY SOIL

Clay, earth or soil that is plastic and tenacious when moist and that becomes permanently

hard when baked or fired. Of widespread importance in industry, clays consist of a group

of hydrous alumino-silicate minerals formed by the weathering of feldspathic rocks, such

as granite. Individual mineral grains are microscopic in size and shaped like flakes. This

makes their aggregate surface area much greater than their thickness and allows them to

take up large amounts of water by adhesion, giving them plasticity and causing some

varieties to swell. Common clay is a mixture of kaolin, or china clay (hydrated clay), and

the fine powder of some feldspathic mineral that is anhydrous (without water) and not

decomposed. Clays vary in plasticity, all being more or less malleable and capable of

being molded into any form when moistened with water. The plastic clays are used for

making pottery of all kinds, bricks and tiles, tobacco pipes, firebricks, and other products.

The commoner varieties of clay and clay rocks are china clay, or kaolin; pipe clay,

similar to kaolin, but containing a larger percentage of silica; potter's clay, not as pure as

pipe clay; sculptor's clay, or modeling clay, a fine potter's clay, sometimes mixed with

fine sand; brick clay, an admixture of clay and sand with some ferruginous (iron-

containing) matter; fire clay, containing little or no lime, alkaline earth, or iron (which act

as fluxes), and hence infusible or highly refractory; shale; loam; and marl.

36
59
.

Brick Wall
Bricks, blocks of baked clay, have been used in construction for thousands of years. Bricks are stacked and bonded together with mortar to form a wall.

The earliest known African sculptures (500 BC to AD 200) are sculpted clay heads and human figures

from central Nigeria. Many surviving examples of African art date from the 14th to the 17th century.

However, most of the African art known today is relatively recent, from the 19th century or later. Very

little earlier African art has survived, primarily because it was made largely of perishable materials such

as wood, cloth, and plant fibers, and because it typically met with intensive use in ceremonies and in

daily life. Scholars of African art base suppositions about earlier art mainly on art of the last two

centuries, but they can only guess at the earlier traditions from which the recent art

developed. 61

62

13.1 MINERALOGICAL STUDY OF CLAY

Clay minerals are predominantely a group of complex alumino – silicates, mainly

formed durjng the chemical weathering of primary minerals . these minerals are

37
predominantly crystalline in that the atoms composing them are arranged in definite

geometrical patterns.

There two fundamental building blocks for the clay mineral structure . One is a silica

unit ( fig. N4 -1 ) in which four oxygen ions ( O2 - ) FORM THE TIPS OF A

TETRAHEDRON and enclose a silicaon ion ( Si 4+ ) . The two units are held together by

ionic bonds. The other unit is one which an aluminium or magnesium. As shown below

О О = O 2-

О = Si 4+

О О A TETRAHEDRAL UNIT

64
О

О О О = ( OH )-

О О = Al 2+

О О

FIG 2 OCTAHEDRAL UNIT

38
WEEK FOURTEEN ( 14 )
Formation of two – layer soils with typical example like kaolinite;

Kaolin (Chinese kaoling,”high ridge”), or china clay, a pure, soft, white clay of variable

but usually low plasticity that retains its white color when fired. The material was first

obtained from a hill called Kaoling and was sent to Europe in the early 18th century. Pure

kaolin is used in the manufacture of fine porcelain and china; impure varieties are used in

making pottery, stoneware, and bricks; as filler for pigments; and in the manufacture of

paper. The chief constituent of kaolin is the mineral kaolinite, a hydrous aluminum

silicate, Al2Si2O5(OH)4, formed by the decomposition of aluminum silicates, particularly

feldspar. Kaolin is now mined primarily in South Carolina, North Carolina, Georgia,

Pennsylvania, and Alabama. The term kaolin is often extended to include other porcelain

clays not discolored by firing.

Clay Minerals.

39
An outstanding accomplishment during the year was the publication of four volumes on

the clay minerals. About 20 scientists from 8 research laboratories, both public and

private, contributed to these studies, which are numbers 5 to 8 of a series sponsored by

the American Petroleum Institute's Project 49 on 'Clay Mineral Standards.' The clay

minerals play an important role from beginning to end in the natural history of an oil

deposit, and the aim of the project is to determine all that can be learned by chemical

analyses, thermal analyses, infra-red spectra, X-ray diffraction measurements, optical

properties, and electron micrographs of the kaolin, montmorillinite, and illite groups of

clay minerals, plus a few closely related minerals. In the four volumes appearing in 1950

all of these approaches were followed. Success of this project further illustrates what can be done
through organized group research.

The montmorillonite clay is made of sheet like units ordered , also as a 1; 2 unit , as as schematically
illustrated in the fig. N4-6

SI n H2O + any
Metallic
Si

Fig. N4-6

WEEK FIFTEEN ( 15 )

Soil, the loose material that covers the land surfaces of Earth and supports the growth of plants. In

general, soil is an unconsolidated, or loose, combination of inorganic and organic materials. The

inorganic components of soil are principally the products of rocks and minerals that have been gradually

broken down by weather, chemical action, and other natural processes. The organic materials are

40
composed of debris from plants and from the decomposition of the many tiny life forms that inhabit the

soil.

Soils vary widely from place to place. Many factors determine the chemical composition and physical

structure of the soil at any given location. The different kinds of rocks, minerals, and other geologic

materials from which the soil originally formed play a role. The kinds of plants or other vegetation that

grow in the soil are also important. Topography—that is, whether the terrain is steep, flat, or some

combination—is another factor. In some cases, human activity such as farming or building has caused

disruption. Soils also differ in color, texture, chemical makeup, and the kinds of plants they can support.

Soil actually constitutes a living system, combining with air, water, and sunlight to sustain plant life. The

essential process of photosynthesis, in which plants convert sunlight into energy, depends on exchanges

that take place within the soil. Plants, in turn, serve as a vital part of the food chain for living things,

including humans. Without soil there would be no vegetation—no crops for food, no forests, flowers, or

grasslands. To a great extent, life on Earth depends on soil.

The study of different soil types and their properties is called soil science or pedology. Soil science plays

a key role in agriculture, helping farmers to select and support the crops on their land and to maintain

fertile, healthy ground for planting. Understanding soil is also important in engineering and construction.

Soil engineers carry out detailed analysis of the soil prior to building roads, houses, industrial and retail

complexes, and other structure.

Relate clay mineralogy to Nigerian soil

Petroleum and natural gas, the source of most of Nigeria’s export earnings, are

concentrated in large amounts in the Niger Delta and just offshore. Smaller deposits are

scattered elsewhere in the coastal region. Iron ore, generally of low grade, is widespread.

Lignite (brown coal) and subbituminous coal (coal of a lower grade than bituminous but

41
of a higher grade than lignite) can be found in southeastern Nigeria. Other mineral

resources include tin and columbite in the Jos Plateau, and limestone in several areas,

particularly in the valleys of the Niger, Benue, and Sokoto rivers. The petroleum and

natural gas industries—with their oil spills, burnoff of natural gas, and clearance of

vegetation—have seriously damaged the land, vegetation, and waterways in the Niger

Delta.

Constituant of Soil;
Soil actually constitutes a living system, combining with air, water, and sunlight to sustain plant life. The essential process of photosynthesis,
in which plants convert sunlight into energy, depends on exchanges that take place within the soil. Plants, in turn, serve as a vital part of the
food chain for living things, including humans. Without soil there would be no vegetation—no crops for food, no forests, flowers, or
grasslands. To a great extent, life on Earth depends on soil.

The study of different soil types and their properties is called soil science or pedology. Soil science plays a key role in agriculture, helping
farmers to select and support the crops on their land and to maintain fertile, healthy ground for planting. Understanding soil is also important
in engineering and construction. Soil engineers carry out detailed analysis of the soil prior to building roads, houses, industrial and retail
complexes, and other structures.

Soil takes a great deal of time to develop—thousands or even millions of years. As such, it is effectively a nonrenewable resource. Yet even
now, in many areas of the world, soil is under siege. Deforestation, over-development, and pollution from humanmade chemicals are just a
few of the consequences of human activity and carelessness. As the human population grows, its demand for food from crops increases,
making soil conservation crucial.

II COMPOSITION OF SOILS

Soils comprise a mixture of inorganic and organic components: minerals, air, water, and plant and animal material. Mineral and organic
particles generally compose roughly 50 percent of a soil's volume. The other 50 percent consists of pores—open areas of various shapes and
sizes.
Networks of pores hold water within the soil and also provide a means of water transport. Oxygen and other gases move through pore spaces
in soil. Pores also serve as passageways for small animals and provide room for the growth of plant roots.

A Inorganic Material

The mineral component of soil is made up of an arrangement of particles that are less than 2.0 mm (0.08in) in diameter. Soil scientists divide
soil particles, also known as soil separates, into three main size groups: sand, silt, and clay. According to the classification scheme used by
the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), the size designations are: sand, 0.05 to 2.00 mm (0.002 to 0.08 in); silt 0.002 to 0.05
mm (0.00008 to 0.002 in); and clay, less than 0.002 mm (0.00008 in). Depending upon the rock materials from which they were derived,
these assorted mineral particles ultimately release the chemicals on which plants depend for survival, such as potassium, calcium,
magnesium, phosphorus, sulfur, iron, and manganese.

B Organic Material

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Organic materials constitute another essential component of soils. Some of this material comes from the residue of plants—for example, the
remains of plant roots deep within the soil, or materials that fall on the ground, such as leaves on a forest floor. These materials become part
of a cycle of decomposition and decay, a cycle that provides important nutrients to the soil. In general, soil fertility depends on a high
content of organic materials.

Even a small area of soil holds a universe of living things, ranging in size from the fairly large to the microscopic: earthworms, mites,
millipedes, centipedes, grubs, termites, lice, springtails, and more. And even a gram of soil might contain as many as a billion microbes—
bacteria and fungi too small to be seen with the naked eye. All these living things form a complex chain: Larger creatures eat organic debris
and excrete waste into the soil, predators consume living prey, and microbes feed on the bodies of dead animals. Bacteria and fungi, in
particular, digest the complex organic compounds that make up living matter and reduce them to simpler compounds that plants can use for
food. A typical example of bacterial action is the formation of ammonia from animal and vegetable proteins. Other bacteria oxidize the
ammonia to form nitrogen compounds called nitrites, and still other bacteria act on the nitrites to form nitrates, another type of nitrogen
compound that can be used by plants. Some types of bacteria are able to fix, or extract, nitrogen directly from the air and make it available in
the soil.

Ultimately, the decay of plant and animal material results in the formation of a dark-colored organic matter known as humus. Humus, unlike
plant residues, is generally resistant to further decomposition.

C Water

Soil scientists also characterize soils according to how effectively they retain and transport water. Once water enters the soil from rain or
irrigation, gravity comes into play, causing water to trickle downward. Water is also taken up in great quantities by the roots of plants:
Plants use anywhere from 200 to 1,000 kg (440 to 2,200 lb) of water in the formation of 1 kg (2.2 lb) of dry matter. Soils differ in their
capacity to retain moisture against the pull exerted by gravity and by plant roots. Coarse soils, such as those consisting of mostly of sand,
tend to hold less water than do soils with finer textures, such as those with a greater proportion of clays.

Water also moves through soil pores independently of gravity. This movement can occur via capillary action, in which water molecules
move because they are more attracted to the pore walls than to one another. Such movement tends to occur from wetter to drier areas of the
soil. The movement from soil to plant roots can also depend on how tightly water molecules are bound to soil particles. The attraction of
water molecules to each other is an example of cohesion. The attraction of water molecules to other materials, such as soil or plant roots, is a
type of adhesion. These effects, which determine the so-called matric potential of the soil, depend largely on the size and arrangement of the
soil particles. Another factor that can affect water movement is referred to as the osmotic potential. The osmotic potential hinges on the
amount of dissolved salts in the soil. Soils high in soluble salt tend to reduce uptake of water by plant roots and seeds. The sum of the matric
and osmotic potentials is called the total water potential.

In soil, water carries out the essential function of bringing mineral nutrients to plants. But the balance between water and air in the soil can
be delicate. An overabundance of water will saturate the soil and fill pore spaces needed for the transport of oxygen. The resulting oxygen
deficiency can kill plants. Fertile soils permit an exchange between plants and the atmosphere, as oxygen diffuses into the soil and is used by
roots for respiration. In turn, the resulting carbon dioxide diffuses through pore spaces and returns to the atmosphere. This exchange is most
efficient in soils with a high degree of porosity. For farmers, gardeners, landscapers, and others with a professional interest in soil health, the
process of aeration—making holes in the soil surface to permit the exchange of air—is a crucial activity. The burrowing of earthworms and
other soil inhabitants provides a natural and beneficial form of aeration.

III SOIL FORMATION

Soil formation is an ongoing process that proceeds through the combined effects of five soilforming factors: parent material, climate, living
organisms, topography, and time. Each combination of the five factors produces a unique type of soil that can be identified by its
characteristic layers, called horizons. Soil formation is also known as pedogenesis (from the Greek words pedon, for “ground,” and genesis,
meaning “birth” or “origin”).

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A Parent Material

The first step in pedogenesis is the formation of parent material from which the soil itself forms. Roughly 99 percent of the world's soils
derive from mineral-based parent materials that are the result of weathering, the physical disintegration and chemical decomposition of
exposed bedrock. The small percentage of remaining soils derives from organic parent materials, which are the product of environments
where organic matter accumulates faster than it decomposes. This accumulation can occur in marshes, bogs, and wetlands.

Bedrock itself does not directly give rise to soil. Rather, the gradual weathering of bedrock, through physical and chemical processes,
produces a layer of rock debris called regolith. Further weathering of this debris, leading to increasingly smaller and finer particles,
ultimately results in the creation of soil.

In some instances, the weathering of bedrock creates parent materials that remain in one place. In other cases, rock materials are transported
far from their source—blown by wind, carried by moving water, and borne inside glaciers.

B Climate

Climate directly affects soil formation. Water, ice, wind, heat, and cold cause physical weathering by loosening and breaking up rocks.
Water in rock crevices expands when it freezes, causing the rocks to crack. Rocks are worn down by water and wind and ground to bits by
the slow movement of glaciers. Climate also determines the speed at which parent materials undergo chemical weathering, a process in
which existing minerals are broken down into new mineral components. Chemical weathering is fastest in hot, moist climates and slowest in
cold, dry climates.

Climate also influences the developing soil by determining the types of plant growth that occur. Low rainfall or recurring drought often
discourage the growth of trees but allow the growth of grass. Soils that develop in cool rainy areas suited to pines and other needle-leaf trees
are low in humus.

C Living Organisms

As the parent material accumulates, living things gradually gain a foothold in it. The arrival of living organisms marks the beginning of the
formation of true soil. Mosses, lichens, and lower plant forms appear first. As they die, their remains add to the developing soil until a thin
layer of humus is built up. Animals’ waste materials add nutrients that are used by plants. Higher forms of plants are eventually able to
establish themselves as more and more humus accumulates. The presence of humus in the upper layers of a soil is important because humus
contains large amounts of the elements needed by plants.

Living organisms also contribute to the development of soils in other ways. Plants build soils by catching dust from volcanoes and deserts,
and plants’ growing roots break up rocks and stir the developing soil. Animals also mix soils by tunneling in them.

D Topography

Topography, or relief, is another important factor in soil formation. The degree of slope on which a soil forms helps to determine how much
rainfall will run off the surface and how much will be retained by the soil. Relief may also affect the average temperature of a soil,
depending on whether or not the slope faces the sun most of the day.

E Time

The amount of time a soil requires to develop varies widely according to the action of the other soil-forming factors. Young soils may
develop in a few days from the alluvium (sediments left by floods) or from the ash from volcanic eruptions. Other soils may take hundreds
of thousands of years to form. In some areas, the soils may be more than a million years old.

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F Horizons

Most soils, as they develop, become arranged in a series of layers, known as horizons. These horizons, starting at the soil surface and
proceeding deeper into the ground, reflect different properties and different degrees of weathering.

Soil scientists have designated several main types of horizons. The surface horizon is usually referred to as the O layer; it consists of loose
organic matter such as fallen leaves and other biomass. Below that is the A horizon, containing a mixture of inorganic mineral materials and
organic matter. Next is the E horizon, a layer from which clay, iron, and aluminum oxides have been lost by a process known as leaching
(when water carries materials in solution down from one soil level to another). Removal of materials in this manner is known as eluviation,
the process that gives the E horizon its name. Below E horizon is the B horizon, in which most of the iron, clays, and other leached materials
have accumulated. The influx of such materials is called illuviation. Under that layer is the C horizon, consisting of partially weather
bedrock, and last, the R horizon of hard bedrock.

Along with these primary designations, soil scientists use many subordinate names to describe the transitional areas between the main
horizons, such as Bt horizon or BX2 horizon.

Soil scientists refer to this arrangement of layers atop one another as a soil profile. Soil profiles change constantly but usually very slowly.
Under normal conditions, soil at the surface is slowly eroded but is constantly replaced by new soil that is created from the parent material in
the C horizon.

IV SOIL CHARACTERISTICS

Scientists can learn a lot about a soil’s composition and origin by examining various features of the soil. Color, texture, aggregation,
porosity, ion content, and pH are all important soil characteristics.

A Color

Soils come in a wide range of colors—shades of brown, red, orange, yellow, gray, and even blue or green. Color alone does not affect a soil,
but it is often a reliable indicator of other soil properties. In the surface soil horizons, a dark color usually indicates the presence of organic
matter. Soils with significant organic material content appear dark brown or black. The most common soil hues are in the red-to-yellow
range, getting their color from iron oxide minerals coating soil particles. Red iron oxides dominate highly weathered soils. Soils frequently
saturated by water appear gray, blue, or green because the minerals that give them the red and yellow colors have been leached away.

B Texture

A soil’s texture depends on its content of the three main mineral components of the soil: sand, silt, and clay. Texture is the relative
percentage of each particle size in a soil. Texture differences can affect many other physical and chemical properties and are therefore
important in measures such as soil productivity. Soils with predominantly large particles tend to drain quickly and have lower fertility. Very
fine-textured soils may be poorly drained, tend to become waterlogged, and are therefore not well-suited for agriculture. Soils with a
medium texture and a relatively even proportion of all particle sizes are most versatile. A combination of 10 to 20 percent clay, along with
sand and silt in roughly equal amounts, and a good quantity of organic materials, is considered an ideal mixture for productive soil.

C Aggregation

Individual soil particles tend to be bound together into larger units referred to as aggregates or soil peds. Aggregation occurs as a result of
complex chemical forces acting on small soil components or when organisms and organic matter in soil act as glue binding particles
together.

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Soil aggregates form soil structure, defined by the shape, size, and strength of the aggregates. There are three main soil shapes: platelike, in
which the aggregates are flat and mostly horizontal; prismlike, meaning greater in vertical than in horizontal dimension; and blocklike,
roughly equal in horizontal and vertical dimensions and either angular or rounded.

Soil peds range in size from very fine—less than 1 mm (0.04 in)—to very coarse—greater than 10 mm (0.4 in). The measure of strength or
grade refers to the stability of the structural unit and is ranked as weak, moderate, or strong. Very young or sandy soils may have no
discernible structure.

D Porosity

The part of the soil that is not solid is made up of pores of various sizes and shapes— sometimes small and separate, sometimes consisting of
continuous tubes. Soil scientists refer to the size, number, and arrangement of these pores as the soil's porosity. Porosity greatly affects water
movement and gas exchange. Well-aggregated soils have numerous pores, which are important for organisms that live in the soil and require
water and oxygen to survive. The transport of nutrients and contaminants will also be affected by soil structure and porosity.

E Ion Content

Soils also have key chemical characteristics. The surfaces of certain soil particles, particularly the clays, hold groupings of atoms known as
ions. These ions carry a negative charge. Like magnets, these negative ions (called anions) attract positive ions (called cations). Cations,
including those from calcium, magnesium, and potassium, then become attached to the soil particles, in a process known as cation exchange.
The chemical reactions in cation exchange make it possible for calcium and the other elements to be changed into water-soluble forms that
plants can use for food. Therefore, a soil's cation exchange capacity is an important measure of its fertility.

F pH

Another important chemical measure is soil pH, which refers to the soil's acidity or alkalinity. This property hinges on the concentration of
hydrogen ions in solution. A greater concentration of hydrogen results in a lower pH, meaning greater acidity. Scientists consider pure water,
with a pH of 7, neutral. The pH of a soil will often determine whether certain plants can be grown successfully. Blueberry plants, for
example, require acidic soils with a pH of roughly 4 to 4.5. Alfalfa and many grasses, on the other hand, require a neutral or slightly alkaline
soil. In agriculture, farmers add limestone to acid soils to neutralize them.

V SOIL CLASSIFICATION

As yet there is no worldwide, unified classification scheme for soil. Since the birth of the modern discipline of soil science roughly 100 years
ago, scientists in different countries have used many systems to organize the various types of soils into groups. For much of the 20th century
in the United States, for example, soil scientists at the USDA used a classification scheme patterned after an earlier Russian method. This
system recognized some three dozen Great Soil Groups.

In 1975 a new classification scheme known as soil taxonomy was published in the United States and is now used by the USDA. Unlike
earlier systems, which organized soils according to various soil formation factors, the new system emphasizes characteristics that can be
precisely measured, including diagnostic horizons (which give clues to soil formation), soil moisture, and soil temperature. In a manner
similar to the kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species system used to classify living things, the USDA soil taxonomy employs
six categories. From the general to the more specific, its categories are order, suborder, great group, subgroup, family, and series. This
system has classified more than 17,000 types of soil in the United States.

The top level of the system consists of 12 orders: alfisols, andisols, aridisols, entisols, gelisols, histosols, inceptisols, mollisols, oxisols,
spodosols, ultisols, and vertisols. Each term employs a Latin or Greek word root to describe a range of soil characteristics. Mollisols, for

46
example (from the Latin mollis, for “soft”) are soils with thick, dark surface horizons that have a high proportion of organic matter. Such
soils can be found in the midwestern United States stretching up into Canada and in portions of northwestern North America. Regions in
New England and the eastern portion of Canada, meanwhile, contain spodosols (from the Greek spodos, meaning “wood ash”), which are
characterized by a light-colored, grayish topsoil and subsoil accumulation of aluminum, organic matter, and iron. Soil scientists classify soils
in many of the southern United States as ultisols (from the Latin for “last”), heavily weathered soils with high concentrations of aluminum.
In the southwest, meanwhile, aridisols (from the Latin aridus, for “dry”), featuring little organic matter, are found, as their name implies, in
arid lands with little plant growth.

The suborder and great group names of the soil taxonomy provide increasing levels of detail. The suborder aqualf, for example, combines
aqu from the Latin aqua, for “water,” and alf from alfisol to describe wet soils. Using assorted roots and combining them in different ways,
scientists describe soils in a highly specialized and specific language. Aeric fragiaqualfs, for example, are wet, well-developed soils with
aerated surface layers and restrictive subsoils.

VI SOIL USE

For most of human history, soil has not been treated as the valuable and essentially nonrenewable resource that it is. Erosion has devastated
soils worldwide as a result of overuse and misuse. In recent years, however, farmers and agricultural experts have become increasingly
concerned with soil management.

A Erosion

Erosion is the wearing away of material on the surface of the land by wind, water, or gravity. In nature, erosion occurs very slowly, as
natural weathering and geologic processes remove rock, parent material, or soil from the land surface. Human activity, on the other hand,
greatly increases the rate of erosion. In the United States, the farming of crops accounts for the loss of over 3 billion metric tons of soil each
year.

In a cultivated field from which crops have been harvested, the soil is often left bare, without protection from the elements, particularly
water. Raindrops smash into the soil, dislodging soil particles. Water then carries these particles away. This movement may take the form of
broad overland flows known as sheet erosion. More often, the eroding soil is concentrated into small channels, or rills, producing so-called
rill erosion. Gravity intensifies water erosion. Landslides, in which large masses of water-loosened soil slide down an incline, are a
particularly extreme example.

Wind erosion occurs where soils are dry, bare, and exposed to winds. Very small soil particles can be suspended in the air and carried away
with the wind. Larger particles bounce along the ground in a process called saltation.

B Soil Management

To prevent exposure of bare soil, farmers can use techniques such as leaving crop residue in the soil after harvesting or planting temporary
growths, such as grasses, to protect the soil from rain between crop-growing seasons. Farmers can also control water runoff by planting
crops along the slope of a hill (on the contour) instead of in rows that go up and down.

Soil faces many threats throughout the world. Deforestation, overgrazing by livestock, and agricultural practices that fail to conserve soil are
three main causes of accelerated soil loss. Other acts of human carelessness also damage soil. These include pollution from agricultural
pesticides, chemical spills, liquid and solid wastes, and acidification from the fall of acid rain. Loss of green spaces, such as grassland and
forested areas, in favor of impermeable surfaces, such as pavement, buildings, and developed land, reduces the amount of soil and increases
pressure on what soil remains. Soil is also compacted by heavy machinery and off-road vehicles. Compaction rearranges soil particles,
increasing the density of the soil and reducing porosity. Crusts form on compacted soils, preventing water movement into the soil and
increasing runoff and erosion.

47
With the world's population now numbering upwards of 6 billion people—a figure that may rise to 10 billion or more within three decades—
humans will depend more than ever on soil for the growth of food crops. Yet the rapidly increasing population, the intensity of agriculture,
and the replacement of soil with concrete and buildings all reduce the capacity of the soil to fulfill this need.

As a result of an increased awareness of soil's importance, many changes are being made to protect soil. Recent interest in soil conservation
holds the promise that humanity will take better care of this precious resource.

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