Dictionary Definition
silt n : mud or clay or small rocks deposited by
a river or lake v : become chocked with silt; "The river silted up"
[syn: silt
up]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ɪlt
Etymology
From cylte, cognate with Norwegian and Danish sylt and Old English sealtNoun
- Mud or fine earth deposited from running or standing water.
- Material with similar physical characteristics, whatever its origins or transport.
Translations
fine earth deposited by water
Verb
- To clog or fill with silt.
- To become clogged with silt.
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
Silt is soil or rock
derived granular
material of a specific
grain size. Silt may occur as a soil or alternatively as
suspended sediment in a
water
column of any surface water body. It
may also exist as deposition soil at the bottom of a water
body.
Source
Silt is generated by a variety of modi capable of breaking and splitting up 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. However, it is mainly by abrasion through transport-processes such as fluvial comminution, aeolian attrition and glacial grinding most effectively operating 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.Grain size criteria
In the Udden-Wentworth scale (due to Krumbein), silt particles range between and mm (3.9 to 62.5 μm), larger than clay but smaller than a sand. ISO 14688 grades silts between 0.002 mm and 0.063 mm, with clay particles being smaller and sands larger. 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. According to the USDA 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 by their plasticity.Environmental impacts
Silt can occur as a deposit or as material
transported by a stream
or by a current
in the ocean. Silt is
easily transported in water and is fine enough to be
carried long distances by air as 'dust'. Thick deposits of silty
material resulting from aeolian deposition are often called
loess (a German term) or
limon (French). Silt and clay contribute to turbidity in water.
The main source of river siltation and storm
sewer sedimentation in urban areas is disturbance of soil by
construction activity. The main cause of river siltation in rural
areas is erosion from
extensive plowing of farm fields, clearcut logging or slash and
burn treatment of forests. When the total ground
surface is stripped of vegetation, the upper soils are vulnerable
to both wind and water erosion. In a number of regions of the
earth, entire sectors of a country have been rendered unproductive;
for example, on the Madagascar high
central plateau,
comprising approximately ten percent of that country's land area,
virtually the entire landscape is sterile of vegetation, with gully
erosive furrows typically in excess of 50 meters deep and one
kilometer wide. Shifting
cultivation is a farming system which sometimes incorporates
the slash and
burn method in some regions of the world. The resulting
sediment load can cause extensive fish kills, hampering economic
development.
Silt, deposited by annual floods along the
Nile
River, created the rich and fertile soil that sustained the
ancient Egyptian
civilization. This silt was depended on for this purpose. A
decrease in silt deposited by the Mississippi
River throughout the 20th century
due to a system of levees
has contributed to the disappearance of protective wetlands and barrier
islands in the delta
region surrounding New
Orleans.http://biology.usgs.gov/s+t/SNT/noframe/ms137.htm
References
silt in Danish: Silt
silt in German: Silt
silt in Spanish: limo
silt in Estonian: Aleuriit
silt in Persian: خاک لای
silt in French: Limon (roche)
silt in Italian: Silt
silt in Lithuanian: Aleuritas
silt in Dutch: Silt
silt in Japanese: シルト
silt in Norwegian: Silt
silt in Norwegian Nynorsk: Silt
silt in Portuguese: Silte
silt in Russian: Ил
silt in Swedish: Silt
silt in Vietnamese: Đất bùn
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
alluvion, alluvium, ash, cinder, clinker, debris, deposit, deposition, deposits, detritus, diluvium, draff, dregs, drift, dross, ember, feces, froth, grounds, lees, loess, moraine, offscum, ooze, precipitate, precipitation, scoria, scree, scum, sediment, settlings, sinter, slag, sludge, smut, soot, sublimate