Sugar sand, the organic salt debris that settles to the bottom of a container of maple sap once it has reached a sugar concentration of 66-67%.[1][2]
Sugar sand, the local name for a type of fine sandy soil found in the Pine Barrens, the southern part of the U.S. state of New Jersey.[3]
Sugar sand, a soil type that is a component of traditional Baseball Rubbing Mud, eroded from the Pine Barrens, used by Major League Baseball as an abrasive to condition new baseballs.[4]
Sugar sand, a type of granular calcite found as an identifying marker bed in the Pfeifer shale member of the Greenhorn Limestone in Ellis, Ness, Hodgeman, and other Kansas counties.[5]
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