three hundred years
1,000
depending on the climate and other factors it takes about 1,000 years
Thousands of years
When a desert during the dinosaurs was dry, that area might be lush rainforest now. So yes. In fact, it can take thousands of years for fertile and nonfertile soil to form.
100 years
It takes about 1,000 years
depending on the climate and other factors it takes about 1,000 years
Thousands of years
Thousands of years
soil encroachment is to take away fertile soil from other.
about 1,000
When a desert during the dinosaurs was dry, that area might be lush rainforest now. So yes. In fact, it can take thousands of years for fertile and nonfertile soil to form.
500 to 1,000 years
100 years
It takes about 1,000 years
It takes about 1,000 years
no,soil cannot grow in such soil erosion because soil erosion damages the upper fertile layer of soil which caries away the fertility of soil and take humus from it
It may take centuries for a soil to become fertile through the breakdown of rock and the accumulation of organic material, but human mismanagement can destroy that fertallity within a few years.