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2 October, 08:26

Is sand/silt alive this is for science so be specific why

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  1. 2 October, 10:38
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    Sand/silt is not alive.

    Explanation:

    Sand/silt is the term used to describe the sediment of flooded lands, that is, it is the sediment of land found under lakes, rivers, swamps and so on.

    It is characterized as a mixture of minerals, colloids, particles of organic matter, and various mineral fragments. It is not a living being, since it does not have a cell phone, does not reproduce, nor does it evolve.

    However, the area/sludge is the habitat of several living organisms, because it is an area rich in nutrients necessary for the development of these organisms.
  2. 2 October, 12:10
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    Silty soil is usually more fertile than other types of soil, meaning it is good for growing crops. Silt promotes water retention and air circulation

    Explanation:

    Silt is a solid, dust-like sediment that water, ice, and wind transport and deposit.

    Silt is made up of rock and mineral particles that are larger than clay but smaller than sand. Individual silt particles are so small that they are difficult to see. To be classified as silt, a particle must be less than. 005 centimeters (.002 inches) across. Silt is found in soil, along with other types of sediment such as clay, sand, and gravel.

    Silty soil is slippery when wet, not grainy or rocky. The soil itself can be called silt if its silt content is greater than 80 percent. When deposits of silt are compressed and the grains are pressed together, rocks such as siltstone form.

    Silt is created when rock is eroded, or worn away, by water and ice. As flowing water transports tiny rock fragments, they scrape against the sides and bottoms of stream beds, chipping away more rock. The particles grind against each other, becoming smaller and smaller until they are silt-size. Glaciers can also erode rock particles to create silt. Finally, wind can transport rock particles through a canyon or across a landscape, forcing the particles to grind against the canyon wall or one another. All three processes create silt.

    Silt can change landscapes. For example, silt settles in still water. So, deposits of silt slowly fill in places like wetlands, lakes, and harbors. Floods deposit silt along river banks and on flood plains. Deltas develop where rivers deposit silt as they empty into another body of water. About 60 percent of the Mississippi River Delta is made up of silt.

    In some parts of the world, windblown silt blankets the land. Such deposits of silt are known as loess. Loess landscapes, such as the Great Plains, are usually a sign of past glacial activity.

    Many species of organisms thrive in slick, silty soil. Lotus plants take root in muddy, silty wetlands, but their large, showy flowers blossom above water. The lotus is an important symbol in Hindu, Buddhist, and ancient Egyptian religions. The lotus is the national flower of India and Vietnam.

    Many species of frog hibernate during the cold winter by burying themselves in a layer of soft silt at the bottom of a lake or pond. Water at the bottom of a body of water does not freeze, and the silt provides some insulation, or warmth, for the animal.

    Silty soil is usually more fertile than other types of soil, meaning it is good for growing crops. Silt promotes water retention and air circulation. Too much clay can make soil too stiff for plants to thrive. In many parts of the world, agriculture has thrived in river deltas, where silt deposits are rich, and along the sides of rivers where annual floods replenish silt. The Nile River Delta in Egypt is one example of an extremely fertile area where farmers have been harvesting crops for thousands of years.

    When there aren't enough trees, rocks, or other materials to prevent erosion, silt can accumulate quickly. Too much silt can upset some ecosystems.

    "Slash and burn" agriculture, for instance, upsets the ecosystem by removing trees. Agricultural soil is washed away into rivers, and nearby waterways are clogged with silt. Animals and plants that have adapted to live in moderately silty soil are forced to find a new niche in order to survive. The river habitats of some organisms in the Amazon River, such as the pink Amazon River dolphin, also called the boto, are threatened. River dolphins cannot locate prey as well in silty water.

    Agricultural and industrial runoff can also clog ecosystems with silt and other sediment. In areas that use chemical fertilizers, runoff can make silt toxic. Toxic silt can poison rivers, lakes, and streams. Silt can also be made toxic by exposure to industrial chemicals from ships, making the silt at the bottom of ports and harbors especially at risk. When the city of Melbourne, Australia, decided to deepen its harbor in 2008, many people worried that disturbing millions of tons of silt, filled with chemicals like arsenic and lead, would threaten the waterway's ecosystem
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