No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
This category of sediment migh be composed by fine mud, sandy mud or muddy sand.
This category of sediment migh be composed by fine mud, sandy mud or muddy sand (Emodnet, n.d.).


The difference between sandy mud and muddy sand is the content in mud, sand and gravel. With sandy mud containing between 50- 90%, 10 - 50% sand, and less than 5% gravel; and muddy sand containing 10-50% mud, 50-90% sand, and less than 5% gravel.
According to Wentworth's classification (1922), fine mud has grain sizes from 0.0078 mm to 0.0156mm.
 
The difference between sandy mud and muddy sand is the content in mud, sand and gravel. With sandy mud containing between 50- 90%, 10 - 50% sand, and less than 5% gravel; and muddy sand containing 10-50% mud, 50-90% sand, and less than 5% gravel (Emodnet, n.d.).


Source:
Source:


Emodnet, European Marine Observation and Data Network (n.d.). "EMODnet Folk substrate classification". Retrieved from [https://www.emodnet-geology.eu/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/EMODnet_FOLK_classification.png https://www.emodnet-geology.eu], on 2022-02-15.
Emodnet, European Marine Observation and Data Network (n.d.). "EMODnet Folk substrate classification". Retrieved from [https://www.emodnet-geology.eu/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/EMODnet_FOLK_classification.png https://www.emodnet-geology.eu], on 2022-02-15.
Wentworth C. (1922).  "Grain Size Classification." ''The Journal of Geology'': "A Scale of Grade and Class Terms for Clastic Sediments". ''Retrieved from'' https://www.planetary.org/space-images/wentworth-1922-grain-size on 2022-02-15.

Revision as of 15:18, 15 February 2022

This category of sediment migh be composed by fine mud, sandy mud or muddy sand (Emodnet, n.d.).

According to Wentworth's classification (1922), fine mud has grain sizes from 0.0078 mm to 0.0156mm.

The difference between sandy mud and muddy sand is the content in mud, sand and gravel. With sandy mud containing between 50- 90%, 10 - 50% sand, and less than 5% gravel; and muddy sand containing 10-50% mud, 50-90% sand, and less than 5% gravel (Emodnet, n.d.).

Source:

Emodnet, European Marine Observation and Data Network (n.d.). "EMODnet Folk substrate classification". Retrieved from https://www.emodnet-geology.eu, on 2022-02-15.

Wentworth C. (1922). "Grain Size Classification." The Journal of Geology: "A Scale of Grade and Class Terms for Clastic Sediments". Retrieved from https://www.planetary.org/space-images/wentworth-1922-grain-size on 2022-02-15.

This page was last edited on 15 February 2022, at 15:18. Content is available under GPLv3 unless otherwise noted.