It would get harder once they clay dry's.
Loam soil is a fertile mixture of sand, silt, clay, and organic matter (humus). It has good drainage, nutrient retention, and aeration properties, making it ideal for plant growth.
Gravel is typically heavier than sand, and therefore gravel would be heavier than both clay and sand. This is because gravel consists of larger-sized particles and has a higher density compared to clay and sand.
Sand, silt, gravel, and clay are similar in that they are all commonly found sediment types. They differ in particle size, with sand having the largest particles, followed by silt, then clay, and gravel having the largest particles. These sediments play crucial roles in soil composition and can impact properties like drainage and fertility.
sand
Clay sand is a type of soil composed of a combination of clay and sand particles. It is often found in areas where the two types of particles have mixed together naturally, resulting in a soil type that contains properties of both clay and sand. Clay sand can be challenging to work with because it tends to be compacted and has poor drainage.
It would get harder once they clay dry's.
Clay, loam (containing a mixture of clay, sand and humus), and sandy.
Sand
I would think clay because it has more density water would go right through sand :)
swamp+sand=clay
Because soil has nutrients that clay and sand don't have
sand
mud+sand=clay
Loam soil is a fertile mixture of sand, silt, clay, and organic matter (humus). It has good drainage, nutrient retention, and aeration properties, making it ideal for plant growth.
Gravel is typically heavier than sand, and therefore gravel would be heavier than both clay and sand. This is because gravel consists of larger-sized particles and has a higher density compared to clay and sand.
Clay is soft and sand is like sand water
Sand. The sand has space between all of the little grains, clay is stuck together with less space.