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Soil Types and Textures

Soil Types and Textures. Definitions. Soil Texture The way a soil feels A name given a textural group based on the relative proportions of each size of soil particle. Definitions. Aggregate Mass or cluster of soil particles such as a clod, crumb or granule Soil Structure

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Soil Types and Textures

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  1. Soil Types and Textures

  2. Definitions • Soil Texture • The way a soil feels • A name given a textural group based on the relative proportions of each size of soil particle

  3. Definitions • Aggregate • Mass or cluster of soil particles such as a clod, crumb or granule • Soil Structure • The combination or arrangement of soil particles into aggregates

  4. Objectives • Define aggregate, soil structure, and soil texture • Identify and describe the three basic soil particles • Identify the major textural classes

  5. SOIL - Fundamental Concepts Prepared by Earl D. Lockridge National Soil Survey Center Lincoln, NE http://soils.usda.gov/education/resources/k_12/tools.html

  6. What is Soil? • Geologic definition: Loose surface of the earth as distinguished from solid bedrock (support of plant life not required). • Traditional definition: Material which nourishes and supports growing plants (includes rocks, water, snow, air).

  7. SOIL • Component definition: Mixture of mineral matter, organic matter, water, and air. Air 25% Mineral Matter 45% Water 25% Organic Matter 5%

  8. SOIL • Soil Taxonomy definition: Collection of natural bodies of the earth’s surface, in places modified or even made by man or earthy materials, containing living matter and supporting or capable of supporting plants out of doors. (Its upper limit is air or shallow water and its lower limit is the depth to which soil weathering has been effective.)

  9. Soil Taxonomy • At the highest level, soils can be recognized in one of 12 categories known as orders. For more information: http://soils.ag.uidaho.edu/soilorders

  10. SOIL • As a portion of the landscape: Collection of natural bodies occupying portions of the earth’s surface that support plants and that have properties due to the integrated effect of climate and living matter, acting upon parent material, as conditioned by relief, over periods of time.

  11. Soil Pedon – A unit of soil • Smallest unit than can be called a soil. • A three-dimensional sample that extends from the soil surface to the deepest roots • Area covered by a pedon varies from 10 - 100 square feet, depending on changes in soil properties.

  12. Polypedons – units of soil • Groups of pedons with very similar characteristics that are closely associated in the landscape are called polypedons. • Polypedonsthat have a common set of characteristics that fall within a particular range are referred to as a soil series • Soil series are the basic units used to map soils The Cooperative Soil Survey (http://soils.missouri.edu/tutorial/page1.asp)

  13. Physical Properties of Soil • Soil texture • Soil structure • Soil color • Bulk density

  14. Three Fractions of Mineral Matter • Sand • Silt • Clay

  15. Soil Particles • Sand • Largest of the soil particles • Feel “gritty” • Silt • Medium sized • Feel soft, silky, or “floury” • Clay • Smallest particles • Feel “sticky”

  16. USDA Texture Triangle

  17. 12 Soil Texture Classes • Sand (S) • Loamy Sand (LS) • Sandy Loam (SL) • Loam (L) • Silt Loam (SIL) • Silt (SI) • Sandy Clay Loam (SCL) • Silty Clay Loam (SICL) • Clay Loam (CL) • Sandy Clay (SC) • Silty Clay (SIC) • Clay (C) Compositions of each of the 12 texture classes is defined by the USDA Soil Triangle

  18. Examples of Soil Structure

  19. Aspects of Soil Structure • The arrangement into aggregates of desirable shape and size • The stability of the aggregate • The configuration of the pores

  20. Factors that Affect Soil Structure • Kind of clay • Amount of organic matter • Freezing and thawing • Wetting and drying • Action of burrowing organisms • Growth of root systems of plants

  21. Effects of Bulk Density • Engineering properties • Water movement • Rooting depth of plants

  22. Soil Color • Indicator of different soil types • Indicator of certain physical and chemical characteristics • Due to humus content and chemical nature of the iron compounds present in the soil

  23. Major Forms of Iron and Effect on Soil Color FormChemical FormulaColor Ferrous oxide FeO Gray Ferric oxide (Hematite) Fe2O3 Red Hydrated ferric oxide (Limonite) 2Fe2O33H2O Yellow

  24. Soil maps – applied to ecological sites • Soils are maps Soil Series or Soil Map Units: • Soil Series a group of soils that are similar in texture and profile. This is the finest level of soil classification. • Soil Map Units are groupings of soils that occur together and it is difficult to draw lines between where the individual series occur. Therefore, a group of series are often grouped for mapping reasons.

  25. Ecological Sites are based on different topographic settings

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