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Basic Concepts and Definitions Pedology (pedon, ground + logos, science) a collective term used to refer to the field of Soil Science that deals with soil morphology, soil genesis, soil classification, soil survey, soil characterization, and soil interpretation. In brief each sub-field can be described in the following manner. Soil morphology is the color, physical structure, and chemical and mineralogical properties of soil material comprising soil horizons. Soil morphology also includes the number, relative position, and relative thickness of horizons comprising the soil profile and the 3-D ranges and variability of these properties. Soil genesis is the science that deals with the formation of soils through various processes as influenced by the environmental properties climate, organisms, topography or relief, parent material, and time. Soil classification is categorization of soils in groups at varying levels of generalization according to their morphological properties and/or assumed genesis in a manner important for the objectives of the classification. Many systems have been and are being used. The main system we will deal with in this course is Soil Taxonomy (Soil Survey Staff, 1999) developed in the U.S. but widely used worldwide. Soil survey is the determination of type and pattern of the occurrence of soil bodies on the landscape and plotting of these soil bodies on maps. Soil characterization is the determination and quantification of chemical, physical, mineralogical, and biological properties of soil samples collected from soil horizons. Soil interpretation refers to the analysis of soil morphological, chemical, physical, mineralogical, and biological data to infer the suitability, potential use, and limitations of soils for various uses. Concepts and Definitions of Soil Soil has been defined by many groups in a variety of ways. For example, geologists may consider soil to be the outer part of the earth's crust. Engineers often consider soil to be any earthy material that can be manipulated and that has certain characteristics important for construction. Soil is often been defined as a medium for plant growth and many cultures since at least 4,000 BC have used plant productivity and/or ability to grow certain crops to define and group soil. Not until 1862 was the soil first defined as a body unto itself, i.e. "soil is considered to be the product of weathering, formed as the tooth of time incessantly grinds the solid covering of our planet and decomposes and destroys its solid mass" Fallou (1862). During the mid to late 1800's, Dokuchaev (Russian scientist) defined soil as a natural evolutionary body that developed in response to five factors; climate, vegetation, parent material, topography, and time. Dokuchaev's work along with the work of many scientists 1 from around the world have established soil as an important resource that is worthy of study as an independent body. The pedological definition of soil is: the collection of natural bodies on the earth's surface containing living matter and supporting or capable of supporting plants out-of-doors. A few key points of this definition include: the collection, i.e. there is more than one kind of soil, natural body (potting media is Granite on Panola Mountain. The hard rock not soil by this definition), containing living is not soil. However, the area immediately matter (deep sediments with no biological around the pine tree is soil (supports plant activity cannot be part of the soil), capable growth out of doors). of supporting plants out of doors (again, at the surface and with properties conducive for plant growth). An additional part of this definition that has been used and incorporates the five factors of soil formation is: "each soil has a unique morphology resulting from the combination of climate, living matter, and relief acting upon earthy parent materials over time." By this definition, hard rock is not soil. Neither is potting soil. The upper limit of soil is the boundary between soil and air, shallow water, live plants, or plant materials that have not begun to decompose. Areas are not considered to have soil if the surface is permanently covered by water too deep (typically more than about 2.5 m) for the growth of rooted plants. The horizontal boundaries of soil are areas where the soil grades to deep water, barren areas, rock, or ice. In some places the separation between soil and non-soil is so gradual that clear distinctions cannot be made. The lower boundary that separates soil from subjacent non-soil is most difficult to define. Soil consists of the horizons near the earth's surface that, in contrast to the underlying parent material, have been altered by the interactions of climate, relief, and living organisms over time. Commonly, soil grades at its lower boundary to hard rock or to earthy materials virtually devoid of animals, roots, or other marks of biological Tree growing in large planter. By the pedological definition, the tree is not growing in soil. 2 activity. The lowest depth of biological activity, however, is difficult to discern and is often gradual. For practical purposes, the lower boundary of soil is arbitrarily set at 200 cm. In soils where either biological activity or current pedogenic processes extend to depths greater than 200 cm, the lower limit of the soil for classification purposes is still 200 cm. The following are a few concepts of soil genesis that are good to keep in mind during subsequent discussions. Water is the driving force for pedogenesis. Pedogenic processes active in soils today have been operating over time and have varying degrees of expression over space. Many soil-forming processes proceed simultaneously, and the properties of the resulting soil are the result of the balance among the processes. For example, leaching of water-soluble salts and clay formation are two soil-forming processes that occur in all soils. Salt leaching is a faster process than formation of clay. In a humid climate, salts will be leached from the soil long before there is visible evidence that clay is being formed. Thus, a “young” soil may have been leached of salts, but there is no evidence that clays have formed from primary minerals. Clays are being formed, but the process has not proceeded to the point that evidence of its occurrence is observable by ordinary means. Later in the soil’s development, salts will still not be present, but evidence of clay formation will be observable. Salt leaching is still occurring, but since all of the salts have previously leached, there is no obvious evidence that the process is occurring. In arid climates, both processes are occurring, but rates are slower than those in humid climates because there is less rainfall to drive the processes. Thus, a soil with age similar to the young soil in the previous discussion may not be leached of soluble salts. An older soil may be leached of salts, but with no evidence of clay formation. Distinctive processes produce distinctive soils. Five environmental factors, climate, organisms, relief or topography, parent material, and time, mediate the pedogenic processes within the soil (leaching, mineral weathering, clay translocation, etc.). Current soils carry the imprint of a combination of pedogenic processes that have been active over the period of soil development, i.e. properties of the soil may have been developed in earlier geologic periods. A particular site may have had many different soils as one or more of the factors influencing soil formation changed over time. There are few old soils (old in a geologic sense). Most are younger than Pleistocene (2,000,000 ybp) and a great many have formed during the Holocene (12,000 ybp). Changes in climate and relief over time erode or bury soils and start the process over. 3 Clays form in soil from primary minerals in the rock. Clays in sedimentary deposits formed in a soil before being eroded and deposited. Other definitions that may be useful: Regolith: Unconsolidated part of earth's crust Pedon: The smallest area (volume) that represents the variation in morphological properties of a particular soil. In most cases it is a volume of soil with an area of about 1 m 2 at the surface and depth of 2 m (depth is arbitrary; the soil does not necessarily stop at 2 m and many soils are not 2 m deep). Soil profile: A vertical section through the soil. Commonly conceived as a plane at right angles to the surface Horizon: A layer, approximately parallel to the soil surface, distinguishable from adjacent layers by a distinctive set of properties produced by soil forming processes. Solum: The part of the soil that has been affected by pedogenic processes. The solum does not include the parent material. 4