Yes. What you see and smell is the composting of leaves and debris in the water. It aids in that it adds nutrients back to the soil and over time when the water recedes, it will be the best crop producing land. Swamp gas can be formed from the methane producing decomposition of leaves and green plant material.
Very few birds are smelly.
you have all. do u boombang
Loamy soil is usually "black" but not all black soil is loamy. Or for that matter, even good soil at all. If former living things along with rounded dirt particles are what made the soil black, then you could expect that it might be loamy. If the black soil is from the bottom of a swamp, say, it might be nutritious soil for plants, yet not be loamy.
Topsoil is the uppermost layer of soil, typically rich in organic matter and nutrients, while black earth (also known as chernozem) refers to a specific type of fertile soil that is dark in color due to high organic content. While all black earth is topsoil, not all topsoil is black earth.
all the time SMELLY
Not at all
some are not all .
No.
A black guy, who sits in soil getting all the nutriants and stuff
No, there are different types of wetlands. Such as marshes, bogs, swamps, and fens.
Chernozem (from Russian чернозём, black soil), also known as "black land" or "black earth", is a black-coloured soil containing a very high percentage of humus - 3% to 15%, and high percentages of phosphoric acids, phosphorus and ammonia. Chernozem is very fertile and produces a high agricultural yield.
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