If you burn down a forest, you are left with a soft, friablesoil seasoned with fertilising ash.
2
What traveller but has noticed the magical effect of rain upon the deep friablesoil, formed by the denuded limestone rock.
3
The land must also be perfectly drained, not only to remove superfluous moisture, but to provide a deep and friablesoil.
4
All about him where he sat, the grey rock pushed through a thin friablesoil like the bones of an ill-buried skeleton.
5
Most of them demand very high levels of available nutrients as well as soft, friablesoil containing reasonable levels of organic matter.
6
The object of draining is to impart to such soils the mellowness and dark color of self drained, rich and friablesoil.
7
The subsequent effect was the doubling, or more probably trebling the value of the land, which has now become a nice friablesoil.
8
Wullie sat down and watched her, smiling a little and stroking his beard as she dug with her hands in the friablesoil.
9
By this course the furrows are partially filled with loose, friablesoil and manure, and they average four or five inches in depth.
10
The ring of rocks is flat on the surface, which is composed of friablesoil, and sustains a luxuriant vegetation, chiefly of cocoa-nut palms.
11
He went on, looking for a spring, sometimes walking on firm ground, sometimes sinking to the ankle in a friablesoil like black sand.
12
She knelt among them, thrusting her hands between their rustling stalks, jerking them up and casting them away, the friablesoil spattering from their roots.
13
Their roots run somewhat shallow, and hence sandy or friablesoils are not desirable.