The Moisture Condition Value (MCV) is determined from a moisture condition test, a physical test indicating how much compactive effort is needed to compact a sample of soil at a particular moisture content. Compactive effort is provided by dropping a captive weight vertically a known distance on to a sample of soil in a cylindrical mould, and measuring compaction. By counting blows to give the required compaction it will be possible to establish a MCV for a soil at a particular moisture content.
Database handle for the object. It is of XML type ID, so is constrained to beunique in the XML document within which it occurs. An external identifier for the object inthe form of a URI may be constructed using standard XML and XPointer methods. This is doneby concatenating the URI for the document, a fragment separator, and the value of the idattribute.
<div><h3>lang (as an attribute name)</h3><p>denotes an attribute whose value is a language code for the natural language of the content of any element; its value is inherited. This name is reserved by virtue of its definition in the XML specification.</p></div><div><h4>Notes</h4><p>Attempting to install the relevant ISO 2- and 3-letter codes as the enumerated possible values is probably never going to be a realistic possibility.</p><p>See BCP 47 at<a href="http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/bcp/bcp47.txt">http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/bcp/bcp47.txt</a>and the IANA language subtag registry at<a href="http://www.iana.org/assignments/language-subtag-registry">http://www.iana.org/assignments/language-subtag-registry</a>for further information.</p><p>The union allows for the 'un-declaration' of xml:lang with the empty string.</p></div>
Source
<element name="MCVTest" type="diggs:MCVTestType" abstract="false" substitutionGroup="diggs:AbstractLaboratoryTestProcedure"><annotation><documentation>The Moisture Condition Value (MCV) is determined from a moisture condition test, a physical test indicating how much compactive effort is needed to compact a sample of soil at a particular moisture content. Compactive effort is provided by dropping a captive weight vertically a known distance on to a sample of soil in a cylindrical mould, and measuring compaction. By counting blows to give the required compaction it will be possible to establish a MCV for a soil at a particular moisture content.</documentation></annotation></element>