Silt is
granular material of a size between
sand and
clay, whose
mineral origin is
quartz and
feldspar. Silt may occur as a
soil (often mixed with sand or clay) or as
sediment mixed in
suspension with water (also known as a suspended load) and soil in a
body of water such as a river. It may also exist as soil deposited at the bottom of a water body, like
mudflows from
landslides. Silt has a moderate
specific area with a typically non-sticky, plastic feel. Silt usually has a floury feel when dry, and a slippery feel when wet. Silt can be visually observed with a hand lens, exhibiting a sparkly appearance. It also can be felt by the tongue as granular when placed on the front teeth (even when mixed with clay particles).
Sources
Silt is created by a variety of physical processes capable of splitting the generally sand-sized quartz crystals of primary rocks by exploiting deficiencies in their
lattice. These involve chemical
weathering of rock and
regolith, and a number of physical weathering processes such as
frost shattering and
haloclasty. The main process is
abrasion through transport, including
fluvial comminution,
aeolian attrition and
glacial grinding. It is in semi-arid environments that substantial quantities of silt are produced. Silt is sometimes known as "rock flour" or "stone dust", especially when produced by glacial action. Mineralogically, silt is composed mainly of
quartz and
feldspar.
Sedimentary rock composed mainly of silt is known as
siltstone.
Liquefaction created by a strong earthquake is silt suspended in water that is hydrodynamically forced up from below ground level.
Grain size criteria
In the
Udden–Wentworth scale (due to
Krumbein), silt particles range between 0.0039 and 0.0625 mm, larger than
clay but smaller than
sand particles.
ISO 14688 grades silts between 0.002 mm and 0.063 mm (sub-divided up into three grades fine, medium and coarse 0.002 mm to 0.006 mm to 0.020 mm to 0.063 mm). In actuality, silt is chemically distinct from clay, and unlike clay,
grains of silt are approximately the same size in all dimensions; furthermore, their size ranges overlap. Clays are formed from thin plate-shaped particles held together by electrostatic forces, so present a cohesion. Pure silts are not cohesive. According to the
U.S. Department of Agriculture Soil Texture Classification system, the sand–silt distinction is made at the 0.05 mm particle size. The USDA system has been adopted by the
Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). In the
Unified Soil Classification System (USCS) and the
AASHTO Soil Classification system, the sand–silt distinction is made at the 0.075 mm particle size (i.e., material passing the #200
sieve). Silts and clays are distinguished mechanically by their
plasticity.
Environmental impacts

Silt is easily transported in
water or other liquid and is fine enough to be carried long distances by air in the form of
dust. Thick deposits of silty material resulting from deposition by
aeolian processes are often called
loess. Silt and clay contribute to
turbidity in water. Silt is transported by
streams or by water currents in the
ocean. When silt appears as a pollutant in water the phenomenon is known as
siltation.
Silt, deposited by annual floods along the
Nile River, created the rich, fertile soil that sustained the
Ancient Egyptian civilization. Silt deposited by the
Mississippi River throughout the 20th century has decreased due to a system of
levees, contributing to the disappearance of protective
wetlands and
barrier islands in the
delta region surrounding
New Orleans.
In southeast Bangladesh, in the
Noakhali district, cross dams were built in the 1960s whereby silt gradually started forming new land called "chars". The district of Noakhali has gained more than of land in the past 50 years.
With Dutch funding, the Bangladeshi government began to help develop older chars in the late 1970s, and the effort has since become a multi-agency operation building roads,
culverts, embankments, cyclone shelters, toilets and ponds, as well as distributing land to settlers. By fall 2010, the program will have allotted some to 21,000 families.
A main source of silt in urban rivers is disturbance of soil by
construction activity.
A main source in rural rivers is
erosion from plowing of farm fields,
clearcutting or
slash and burn treatment of
forests.
Culture
The fertile black silt of the
Nile river's banks is a symbol of rebirth, associated with the
Egyptian god Anubis.
See also
*
Erosion control
*
Nonpoint source pollution
*
Sediment control
*
Silt fence
*
Siltation
References
{{Authority control
Category:Soil
Category:Sedimentology
Category:Sediments