You haven't said what you are building. Possibly it should not be built on soil at all, but should be built on bedrock. You don't want to build something on soil that is too loose because the soil could shift, and your structure, whatever it is, might tilt, or sink into the soil to some extent. Better still, pour a concrete foundation, and build on that.
The generic term for very small loose particles of hard broken rock or minerals is "sediment." These particles are created through the process of erosion, weathering, and deposition.
Permeable layers from most to least permeable: loose soil, sand, gravel, hard clay, solid rock. This means that water and other substances can more easily pass through loose soil and sand compared to clay or solid rock.
No. All you need is a large, smooth rock, some soap, a lot of water, and the clothes. It take a long time to build a rock, though.
When you dig up dirt you get to this hard soil like substance. Beneath this is the hard rock you're talking about. It is called Bedrock.
Probibly on solid rock or hard hard ground that doesn't get wet and muddy easily.
Loose rock material is called detritus.
compared to most rocks sandstone is rather soft and brittle, but the hardness of it varies greatly from rock to rock, some sandstone is so soft it can be crushed by stamping on it while other sandstone is so hard it can be used to build buildings
In my opinion, I like Skid Row better. But I am a Hard Rock / Metal fan. Cinderella is more of a soft rock / country band.
Rubies are accessed by mining. Some are found embedded in hard rock, as in Afghanistan, some are found loose in gravels, as in Burma.
Bedrock is the solid rock layer beneath the soil and loose sediment on the Earth's surface. It typically consists of hard and compacted igneous, metamorphic, or sedimentary rock that provides a stable foundation for the layers above it.
Loose rock material is called detritus.
Technically, yes. But, they are Christian Hard-Rock. Specifically Christian Hard-Rock.