Using The Soil Triangle
Follow these steps to determine the
name of your soil texture:
- Place the edge of a ruler at the point along the base of the triangle that represents the percent of sand in your sample. Position the ruler on or parallel to the lines which slant toward the base of the triangle.
- Place the edge of a second ruler at the point along the right side of the triangle that represents the percent of silt in your sample. Position the ruler on or parallel to the lines which slant toward the base of the triangle.
- Place the point of a pencil or water soluble marker at the point where the two rulers meet. Place the top edge of one of the rulers on the mark, and hold the ruler parallel to the horizontal lines. The number on the left should be the percent of clay in the sample.
- The descriptive name of the soil sample is written in the shaded area where the mark is located. If the mark should fall directly on a line between two descriptions, record both names.
Feel the texture of a moist soil
sample. Sand will feel "gritty", while silt will feel like
powder or flour. Clay will feel "sticky" and hard to
squeeze, and will probably stick to your hand. Looking at the
textural triangle, try to estimate how much sand, silt, or clay is in
the sample. Find the name of the texture that this soil corresponds
to.
Practice Exercises:
Use the following numbers to determine
the soil texture name using the textural triangle. When a number is
missing, fill in the blanks (note: the sum of % sand, silt and clay
should always add up to 100%):
% SAND
|
%SILT
|
%CLAY
|
TEXTURE NAME
|
75 |
10 |
15 |
sandy loam |
10 |
83 |
7 |
|
42 |
|
37 |
|
|
52 |
21 |
|
|
35 |
50 |
|
30 |
55 |
|
|
37 |
|
21 |
|
5 |
70 |
|
|
55 |
|
40 |
|
|
45 |
10 |
|
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