Foundation, Concrete and Earthquake Engineering

Soils Transported with Water

We already learned that soil is a weather product of rock that may or may not be transported to another location. We have also learned about residual soil and transported soil. As water is included in this topic, definitely it is transported soil.


Of many transporting agents, water is one of the most dominating agents in transporting soil to new location. Swift flowing water usually carries a significant amount of soil and this carrying is done by either

-in suspension

-by rolling them alone bed


Lacustrine soil deposits in Cardiel Lake, Patagonia, Argentina
Water erodes hills through which it run and deposits erosion products on the valleys.

The size of particles carried by flowing water depends on velocity of current. Very swift water often can carry large size particles like boulders and gravel is very common.


When velocity of water decreases water cannot carry coarse particles and get deposited. The remaining relatively finer particles are transported further to downstream and they also get deposited when velocity is decreased significantly.


At confluences, the velocity reached almost zero and finer particles remains in flowing water get deposited forming a delta. The receiving bodies of the confluences may be

-lake

-sea

-ocean

The deposition that made in a lake is known Lacustrine deposits. When receiving bodies are sea or ocean the deposition is called Marine deposits. But all soils that are transported by and subsequently deposited from water are called Alluvial deposits.

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