1 / 15

Soil Formation and Composition

Soil Formation and Composition. EQ: How do you scientifically describe soil? How is soil formed?. Soil Formation. Soil- the loose, weathered material on Earth’s surface in which plants can grow 3 steps to soil formation 1)Begins as bedrock (solid layer of rock beneath the soil)

drex
Télécharger la présentation

Soil Formation and Composition

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 Formation and Composition EQ: How do you scientifically describe soil? How is soil formed? G2-2

  2. Soil Formation • Soil- the loose, weathered material on Earth’s surface in which plants can grow • 3 steps to soil formation 1)Begins as bedrock (solid layer of rock beneath the soil) 2)Breaks down (weathering) 3)Mixes with other materials EQ: How do you scientifically describe soil? How is soil formed? G2-2

  3. Soil Composition • Soil – a mixture of rock particles, minerals, decayed organic material, air and water • Rock particles- sand, silt, clay • 2 factors affect the rock particles and minerals found in a soil - bedrock - type of weathering EQ: How do you scientifically describe soil? How is soil formed? G2-2

  4. Soil Composition • Humus – dark colored substance that forms as plant and animal remains decay • Creates space in soil for air and water • Rich in nutrients for plants: • nitrogen, sulfur, phosphorus, and potassium EQ: How do you scientifically describe soil? How is soil formed? G2-2

  5. Soil Color • Color of soil can vary from gray, yellow, deep red brown to black. EQ: How do you scientifically describe soil? How is soil formed? G2-2

  6. Soil Texture • Size of particles. • Rub soil between your fingers to test. • Different names are given to soils depending on the proportion of sand, silt, and clay. • Every soil on earth is defined as sand, silt, clay. EQ: How do you scientifically describe soil? How is soil formed? G2-2

  7. Soil Texture Pebbles/gravel are NOT considered soil! EQ: How do you scientifically describe soil? How is soil formed? G2-2

  8. Soil Texture is: • grainy -large-sized pieces and feels gritty, like sand. • silky -medium-sized pieces and feels powdery, like silt. • sticky -small pieces and feels gummy, like wet clay. EQ: How do you scientifically describe soil? How is soil formed? G2-2

  9. EQ: How do you scientifically describe soil? How is soil formed? Soil Consistency • how easily the soil clumps can bebroken apart. The soil consistency is • loose - soil breaks apart when held. • friable - soil breaks apart with a small amount of pressure from one finger. • firm - soil breaks apart with a lot of pressure between two fingers. G2-2

  10. EQ: How do you scientifically describe soil? How is soil formed? Soil Horizons • A layer of soil that differs in color and texture from the layers above or below it G2-2

  11. Soil Horizons • Scientists classify soil into 3 horizons • A Horizon - topsoil-crumbly, dark brown soil • B Horizon – subsoil- contains clay and other particles washed down from A. Contains little humus • C Horizon – contains partly weathered rock EQ: How do you scientifically describe soil? How is soil formed? G2-2

  12. Rate of Soil Formation • Depends on the climate and type of rock • Warm and rainy climate – soil develops quickly • Cold and dry climate – soil develops slowly EQ: How do you scientifically describe soil? How is soil formed? G2-2

  13. Life in soil- organisms mix the soil, create spaces, make humus . • Plant “litter”, a loose layer over the soil where plants shed leaves or die • Decomposers, organisms that break down the remains of dead plants and animals live in the soil • Bacteria, fungi, earthworms, snails and beetles EQ: How do you scientifically describe soil? How is soil formed? G2-2

  14. Soil Types in the United States • Scientists classify soil based on: • Climate • Common plants found in the region • Soil composition EQ: How do you scientifically describe soil? How is soil formed? G2-2

  15. Class Work and Homework • Classwork: Copy questions 1-5 on notebook paper. • Homework: Questions 1-5 using notes. See page G55. G2-2

More Related