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Grain size

Adapted from Wikipedia Β· Adventurer experience

Beach stones at Nash Point in South Wales, showing interesting rock shapes formed by nature.

Grain size, also called particle size, is the diameter of tiny pieces of sediment. It can also describe other materials made of small grains. This is different from crystallite size, which is the size of a single crystal inside a grain.

Wentworth grain size chart from United States Geological Survey Open-File Report 2006-1195: Note size typos; 33.1mm is 38.1 & .545mm is .594

Granular materials can vary in size from very tiny particles all the way up to large boulders. These materials include clay, silt, sand, gravel, cobbles, and boulders. Knowing grain size helps scientists and engineers learn about how rocks form and how soil behaves.

Krumbein phi scale

The Krumbein phi scale is a way to measure the size of tiny particles like sand or gravel. It was created by a scientist named W. C. Krumbein in 1934.

This scale uses a special math formula to name different sizes of particles. For example, it can tell if something is sand or a bigger piece like a pebble. The scale uses 1 millimeter as a common reference size for very small things.

Ο† scaleSize range
(metric)
Size range
(approx. inches)
Aggregate name
(Wentworth class)
Other names
>256Β mm>10.1 inBoulder
βˆ’6 to βˆ’864–256Β mm2.5–10.1 inCobble
βˆ’5 to βˆ’632–64Β mm1.26–2.5 inVery coarse gravelPebble
βˆ’4 to βˆ’516–32Β mm0.63–1.26 inCoarse gravelPebble
βˆ’3 to βˆ’48–16Β mm0.31–0.63 inMedium gravelPebble
βˆ’2 to βˆ’34–8Β mm0.157–0.31 inFine gravelPebble
βˆ’1 to βˆ’22–4Β mm0.079–0.157 inVery fine gravelGranule
0 to βˆ’11–2Β mm0.039–0.079 inVery coarse sand
1 to 00.5–1Β mm0.020–0.039 inCoarse sand
2 to 10.25–0.5Β mm0.010–0.020 inMedium sand
3 to 2125–250 ΞΌm0.0049–0.010 inFine sand
4 to 362.5–125Β ΞΌm0.0025–0.0049 inVery fine sand
8 to 43.9–62.5Β ΞΌm0.00015–0.0025 inSiltMud
10 to 80.98–3.9Β ΞΌm3.8Γ—10βˆ’5–0.00015Β inClayMud
20 to 100.95–977Β nm3.8Γ—10βˆ’8–3.8Γ—10βˆ’5Β inColloidMud

International scale

ISO 14688-1:2017 gives the main rules for identifying and grouping soils. These rules look at the material and size features that are most often used when studying soils for building and engineering. This standard works for natural soils where they are found, similar materials made by people, and soils that have been moved to new places.

ISO 14688-1:2017
NameSize range (mm)Size range (approx. in)
Very coarse soilLarge boulderlBo>630>24.8031
BoulderBo200–6307.8740–24.803
CobbleCo63–2002.4803–7.8740
Coarse soilGravelCoarse gravelcGr20–630.78740–2.4803
Medium gravelmGr6.3–200.24803–0.78740
Fine gravelfGr2.0–6.30.078740–0.24803
SandCoarse sandcSa0.63–2.00.024803–0.078740
Medium sandmSa0.2–0.630.0078740–0.024803
Fine sandfSa0.063–0.20.0024803–0.0078740
Fine soilSiltCoarse siltcSi0.02–0.0630.00078740–0.0024803
Medium siltmSi0.0063–0.020.00024803–0.00078740
Fine siltfSi0.002–0.00630.000078740–0.00024803
ClayCl≀0.002≀0.000078740

Sorting

When we look at a pile of sand or mud, the pieces can be different sizes. Scientists study how these sizes are spread out, which they call "sorting." Nature can sort these pieces, like when a river carries away smaller grains and leaves bigger ones behind.

To measure how well sorted the grains are, scientists use a formula called the Inclusive Graphic Standard Deviation. This formula looks at the different sizes of the grains to give a number that shows how mixed or separated the sizes are.

Diameter (phi units)Description
Οƒ I {\displaystyle \sigma _{I}} very well sorted
0.35 well sorted
0.50 moderately sorted
1.00 poorly sorted
2.00 very poorly sorted
4.00 extremely poorly sorted

Images

A scientific diagram showing particle size distribution, helpful for learning about grains and measurements.

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Grain size, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Images from Wikimedia Commons. Tap any image to view credits and license.