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Soil forms when weathered parent material interacts with environment.

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Presentation on theme: "Soil forms when weathered parent material interacts with environment."— Presentation transcript:

1 Soil forms when weathered parent material interacts with environment.
Soil Formation Soil forms when weathered parent material interacts with environment.

2 Soil environment includes:
Climate and weather Animals Microbes Human use Hazards ( natural and unnatural ) Topographical relief

3 rates of soil formation
Slow Fast ~ 1 cm/1000 yr ~ 30cm/50yr

4 Hans Jenny 1941: soil is open system, properties are functionally related; system changes when property(ies) change(s). Jenny’s CLORPT equation s = ƒ (cl, o, r, p, t)

5 1. CLIMATE 2. ORGANISMS 3. RELIEF 4. PARENT MATERIAL 5. TIME

6 1. CLIMATE …determines speed, character of soil development:
type and rate of weathering living organisms and plants found in an area

7 components of climate :
1. Temperature -for every 10°C , biochemical rxn rates 2X 2. Effective precipitation (water that moves through entire soil column, including regolith) -depth of water = depth of weathering -water moves soluble & suspended materials

8 (Fig. 2.15)

9 Effective precipitation
-a) seasonal distribution -b) temperature, evaporation -c) topography -d)permeability

10 a) Seasonal distribution of precipitation:
Location B 600 mm/yr Location A 600 mm/yr 100mm 50mm 6 rainy months only Every month

11

12 b) Temperature and evaporation:
Location A hot Location B cool High evapotranspiration Low evapotranspiration 600 mm 600 mm Lower effective ppt Higher effective ppt

13 Topography: concave or bottom of slope (receiving) level slope

14 Permeability:

15 2. Organisms plant and animal
(Living plants and animals on and in soil) -type of vegetation influences soil type -base pumping -sources of organic matter -nutrient recycling -vegetation prevents erosion

16 Type of vegetation influences soil type

17 Base pumping Deciduous trees are more effective base pumpers than conifers . -needles are hard to break down -basic cations leach away: soil is acidic -deciduous litter is easy to break down -cations (bases) are released so surface soils are not acidic

18 Macroanimals (insects, mammals, gastropods, earthworms)
mix, bind soil; create channels for air, water

19 crotovinas

20 Macroanimals (insects, mammals, gastropods, earthworms)
mix, bind soil; create channels for air, water Microanimals (nematodes, protozoa)

21 Macroanimals (insects, mammals, gastropods, earthworms)
mix, bind soil; create channels for air, water Microanimals (nematodes, protozoa) Macroplants (the green plants) provide organic matter, roots create channels, adsorb nutrients, release CO2, stabilize, protect from erosion

22 Macroanimals (insects, mammals, gastropods, earthworms)
mix, bind soil; create channels for air, water Microanimals (nematodes, protozoa) Macroplants (the green plants) provide organic matter, roots create channels, adsorb nutrients, release CO2, stabilize, protect from erosion Micro “plants” (fungi, bacteria, actinomycetes, algae) decomposers

23 3. Relief/Topography important for rate of runoff, erosion, drainage

24

25 Flat valley floors and flat ridge tops: soil accumulates; (deepening>removal)
Slopes: (removal> deepening)

26 Vertical Zonation soils, climate, vegetation change with elevation

27 4. Parent Material Determines texture, types of weathering, mineral make-up

28 weathering Physical (Mechanical): disintegration of parent material; increases surface area: surface area increases by same factor as particle size decreases Chemical (Biogeochemical) : primary minerals are broken down and secondary minerals are formed

29

30

31 Chemical (biogeochemical):
Physical: 1. Freeze/thaw 2. Exfoliation 3. Abrasion 4. Salt wedging Chemical (biogeochemical): 1. Hydrolysis: minerals react with H2O H+ replace soluble parts; OH- combine with mineral cations 2. Hydration: mineral combines with H2O 3. Oxidation: mineral combines with O2 (lose electron) Reduction: loss of O2 (gain electron) 4. Carbonation: oxides combine with acids to make carbonates 5. Complexation: organic acids form organic complexes with metal cations

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33 Freeze / Thaw

34

35

36 Chemical (biogeochemical):
Physical: 1. Freeze/thaw 2. Exfoliation 3. Abrasion 4. Salt wedging Chemical (biogeochemical): 1. Hydrolysis: minerals react with H2O H+ replace soluble parts; OH- combine with mineral cations 2. Hydration: mineral combines with H2O 3. Oxidation: mineral combines with O2 (lose electron) Reduction: loss of O2 (gain electron) 4. Carbonation: oxides combine with acids to make carbonates 5. Complexation: organic acids form organic complexes with metal cations

37 2. Exfoliation

38

39

40 Chemical (biogeochemical):
Physical: 1. Freeze/thaw 2. Exfoliation 3. Abrasion 4. Salt wedging Chemical (biogeochemical): 1. Hydrolysis: minerals react with H2O H+ replace soluble parts; OH- combine with mineral cations 2. Hydration: mineral combines with H2O 3. Oxidation: mineral combines with O2 (lose electron) Reduction: loss of O2 (gain electron) 4. Carbonation: oxides combine with acids to make carbonates 5. Complexation: organic acids form organic complexes with metal cations

41 3. Abrasion (wind, water, ice)

42

43 water

44 ice

45 Chemical (biogeochemical):
Physical: 1. Freeze/thaw 2. Exfoliation 3. Abrasion 4. Salt wedging Chemical (biogeochemical): 1. Hydrolysis: minerals react with H2O H+ replace soluble parts; OH- combine with mineral cations 2. Hydration: mineral combines with H2O 3. Oxidation: mineral combines with O2 (lose electron) Reduction: loss of O2 (gain electron) 4. Carbonation: oxides combine with acids to make carbonates 5. Complexation: organic acids form organic complexes with metal cations

46 4. Salt Wedging

47 5. Time Amount of time soil has been exposed to weathering and soil forming processes influences soil properties. Jenny’s staircase Ohio/Ky.

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49 4 soil forming processes: (pedogenic)
Transformation

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51 4 soil forming processes:
Transformation Translocation

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53 4 soil forming processes:
Transformation Translocation Addition

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55 4 soil forming processes:
Transformation Translocation Addition Loss

56


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