
right|upright=1.35|300px|thumb|Caliche Petrified wood|fossil forest on [[San Miguel Island, California]]
right|upright=1.35|300px|thumb|Caliche Petrified wood|fossil forest on [[San Miguel Island, California]]
Caliche () is a soil accumulation of soluble calcium carbonate at depth, where it precipitates and binds other materials—such as gravel, sand, clay, and silt. It occurs worldwide, in aridisol and mollisol soil orders—generally in arid or semiarid regions, including in central and western Australia, in the Kalahari Desert, in the High Plains of the western United States, in the Sonoran Desert, Chihuahuan Desert and Mojave Desert of North America, and in eastern Saudi Arabia at Al-Hasa. Caliche is also known as calcrete or kankar (in India). It belongs to the duricrusts. The term is borrowed from Spanish and is originally from the Latin word , meaning lime.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).