Humus vs Muckland - What's the difference?
humus | muckland |
A large group of natural organic compounds, found in the soil, formed from the chemical and biological decomposition of plant and animal residues and from the synthetic activity of microorganisms
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Land whose soil is primarily composed of humus from drained swampland, used for growing certain crops such as onions and carrots.
*{{quote-news, year=2007, date=May 27, author=The Associated Press, title=A Champion at 80: Basilio’s Only Fight Now Is With Age, work=New York Times
, passage=Basilio’s picaresque journey began on an onion farm in Canastota in central New York’s muckland , one of 10 children of Italian immigrants. }}
As nouns the difference between humus and muckland
is that humus is while muckland is land whose soil is primarily composed of humus from drained swampland, used for growing certain crops such as onions and carrots.humus
English
Etymology 1
.Noun
(-)See also
* compost * mulchEtymology 2
.Noun
(-)muckland
English
Noun
citation