ok guys, when I read engineered fill within a specification, inmediatelly understand that geotecnical engineer need a fill material that meets certain features to be suitable to withstand structural loads, so, as fatdad posted, fill material properties are variable specially if these materials come from a borrow pit, therefore, in order to mantain reasonable homogenity, certain restrictions are given by the enginer, for instance, typical engineered fill characteristics are (it may vary from project to project or agency):
Natural or artificially graded mixture of natural or crushed gravel, crushed stone and or crushed sand with a least 90 percent of material passing 38 mm (1-1/2 in.) sieve and not more than 12 percent passing No. 200 (0.075mm) sieve
sometimes a maximum LL of about 40 and a PI not higher than 12 is specified.
So, if you see this material is quite specific and it is easy for someone with certain CMT or Geotechnical Trainning to identify this materials at the jobsite
In the other hand, it is not just the material characteristics, engineered fill involves placment controls, thickness should be surveyed, moisture content should be within a certain range, and a minimum percent of the maximum density should be reached.
by the way, engineered fill is not a magical solution and certain conditions should exist to use it to built something on it and geotechnical engineer based on some theories and experience determine if it is a suitable solution, who could imagine that colum stone could work simply drilling a hole in soft soils and filling the hole wit gravel, and it realy work.