Top Soil Sub Soil Parent Material Bedrock
The solid rock that underlies loose material, such as soil, sand, clay, or gravel.
It is in the (top)soil.
Bedrock is the first layer of solid rock underlying the soil, sand, loose glacial deposits, volcanic ash, or unlithified sediments. Depending on the specific location, the bedrock could be granite, basalt, limestone, sandstone, gneiss, or any other type of solid rock.
a soil rich in lime on top of a limestone bedrock
sand stone
Residual soil is the soil formed from the weathering of the bedrock.
Top Soil Sub Soil Parent Material Bedrock
I personally have found a fun little way to make a cannon in creative mode. You make a hollow tube with a bottom made out of obsidian or bedrock, and put TNT at the bottom and sand at the top. When you activate the TNT, the sand will shoot out.
You're talking about driveways, right? As in your zoning says you can have either a concrete drive, an asphalt one or a sand & gravel one? Gravel is crushed rock, and they say "sand and gravel" because gravel almost always has sand in it. Crushed loose bedrock would be fine.
The solid rock that underlies loose material, such as soil, sand, clay, or gravel.
It is in the (top)soil.
a. at the top of the zone of saturation
No. They can only pick up grass, dirt, sand, gravel, etc.
No. Humus is organic matter, and formed over the years as living organisms (mostly plants) die and decompose in the soil. It is about 58% carbon, by weight. Bedrock can decompose, too, but it never becomes humus. Depending on the type of bedrock, it breaks down into sand, silt, gravel and clay minerals. Limestone bedrock may dissolve.
basalt, granite, bedrock mostly
The name of the town in Flintstones is Bedrock.