1 / 25

Soil Erosion

Soil Erosion. Ag I Soils. Objectives. Differentiate between natural soil erosion and soil erosion caused by humans List the main causes of accelerated erosion List and define the major types of soil erosion. Geological Erosion. Natural process that occurs all the time

albany
Télécharger la présentation

Soil Erosion

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Soil Erosion Ag I Soils

  2. Objectives Differentiate between natural soil erosion and soil erosion caused by humans List the main causes of accelerated erosion List and define the major types of soil erosion

  3. Geological Erosion Natural process that occurs all the time Part of the soil formation process Much slower than soil formation

  4. Accelerated Erosion A speed up of the normal rate of erosion Begins when land’s natural plant cover is removed Caused by two basic forces-moving water and wind

  5. Water-Caused Erosion

  6. Splash Erosion • Occurs when raindrops strike the earth • Raindrops hit at about 20 MPH • If raindrops strike plants their force is broken and they become harmless • If raindrops strike bare soil the force is absorbed by soil particles and they are torn apart • When this happens the soil particles are either suspended and carried away or filter into soil pore spaces making the soil less permeable.

  7. Run-off • Most destructive action of water on soil • The faster the water flows the more destructive it becomes • Three-fold damage • Existing soil structure is damaged • Soil surface is reshaped making it less workable • Soil is carried away and may eventually be redeposited elsewhere • Silt deposits can sometimes be good • Nile Valley, Mississippi Delta • Most are harmful causing clogged waterways, fish kills, filled lakes, muddy streams and mud flats

  8. Run-off

  9. Wind Erosion

  10. Wind Erosion 2 basic actions-drying and dislodging, movement A serious problem in dry areas where the land is relatively flat with few trees

  11. Wind Action Dries the soil surface Moves soil particles leaving behind larger sand particles making soil surfaces become very sandy or covered by a layer of clay

  12. Results of Erosion

  13. Sheet Erosion Gradual and fairly uniform removal of the surface soil Occurs slowly so producer may not even be aware it is taking place Caused by splash erosion coupled with a slow runoff of soil-laden water

  14. Results of Sheet Erosion • Gradual reduction of the topsoil thickness • This leads to a decrease in soil productivity and eventually totally unproductive soil • Also notice color changes in the soil in plowed fields because as they are plowed subsoil is brought to the top • Discoloration is a indication that sheet erosion is well advanced and damage has already been done

  15. Sheet Erosion

  16. Rill Erosion • More rapid and visible • Rills are small streams cut into the soil surface by running water • Damage has occurred when rills appear • May be very small or large and noticeable • When rills become too large they become a gully

  17. Rill Erosion

  18. Gully Erosion Obvious Severe problem More obvious than rill or sheet erosion

  19. Gully Erosion

  20. Sand blows • 2 forms of damage • Soil removal • Sand deposits or drifts

  21. Sand blows-Soil Removal • Much like sheet erosion • Wind simply picks up the soil particles and blows them away • As soil blows away • The field becomes less productive • It retains less rainwater • It produces less vegetation • Damage may be severe before it becomes obvious

  22. Sand blow

  23. Sand blows-Deposits or Drifts • More obvious • Result when the wind is forced to change directions abruptly • Fencerows, windbreaks, sides of buildings • When the wind changes direction it redeposit's the soil particles • Larger and more flat bare fields are the more likely they will be affected by wind erosion

  24. Sand blows-Drifts

  25. Dustbowl Watch Modern Marvels: Black Blizzard and complete questions

More Related