One part of my garden has a heavy, dark clay soil. It is now waterlogged with a lot of surface water that does not shift at all even after a day of waiting. When pressed into a 4mm thick ribbon, it breaks under its own weight after about 10 or 15cm.
I do not have a photo to hand, but may try to upload later.
I took a large handful of the material and compressed into a ball. I rolled it around until smooth and left it on my outside windowsill to dry. When I came back to it late the next day, it was completely solid, like a little cannon ball. It is not quite as heavy as an iron ball, but it has that same dark faded metallic grey iron colour, though much less metallic, more like slightly reflective but matt. Knocking it on the wall, it doesn't flake, chip or crack. It's solid as a stone.
Is this normal for clay? I was under the impression it needed to be fired to become solid like that. The reason I ask is I have a partly demolished wall that I would like to restore, and I am thinking that perhaps I could just excavate this area of the garden to use as a building material, rather than try to solve my drainage problem. If this is not normal for clay, how could I identify what it might be, and if/how to use it as a building material? If I can make a cob from this, would that be suitable for an outdoor wall?