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2 - Basic concepts: soil morphology

from Part I - The building blocks of the soil

Randall J. Schaetzl
Affiliation:
Michigan State University
Sharon Anderson
Affiliation:
California State University, Monterey Bay
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Summary

Soil means diffferent things to different people. To a farmer or horticulturalist, it is a medium for plant growth. To an engineer, it is something to build on or remove before construction can occur, or it may actually be a type of engineering medium used for road building, house foundations or septic drain fields. To a hydrologist soil functions as a source of water purification and supply. To the pedologist or soil geographer, however, soil is a natural, three-dimensional body that has formed at the Earth's surface, through the interactions of at least five soil-forming factors (climate, biota, relief, parent materials and time). Its genesis involves past processes and it is likely to change in the future. It varies spatially in the horizontal and vertical dimensions. It is capable of being destroyed and yet it is resilient to perturbations.

Each soil also has a distinct morphology, defined as its structure or form. Soil morphology is all that can be seen and felt about a soil. It includes not only “what is there” but also how it is “put together” – its architecture. Soil's other defining characteristics, such as horizonation, chemistry and mineralogy, are discussed in later chapters.

Soils are composed of clastic particles (mineral matter), organic materials in various stages of decay, living organisms, water (or ice), and gases within pores of various sizes (Fig. 2.1). The absolute amounts of each, and their arrangement into a particular fabric, are the sum of soil morphology.

Type
Chapter
Information
Soils
Genesis and Geomorphology
, pp. 9 - 31
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

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