Title: Soils in the Carleton undergraduate liberalarts curriculum
1Soils in the Carleton undergraduate liberal-arts
curriculum
- Mary Savina
- Department of Geology
- Carleton College
2Outline
- Students, liberal arts, and geology
- Geologic/Soils setting of Northfield
- labs and projects
- agriculture
- Geology Courses with soils content
- Evolution of Geology of Soils 1979-2001
- Comments, questions and discussion
3The liberal-arts tradition
- Broad education in arts, literature, science,
humanities and social science - Emphasis on broadly useful skills such as
writing, foreign language, research (library and
science) - Little emphasis on practical applications
- No graduate programs, certificates, etc.
- (At Carleton) one degree B. A.
4Student profile
- Students from across the country
- Few students from rural backgrounds (most
suburban) - Fewer students from agricultural backgrounds
- Strong student interest in sciences
5Minnesota
Northfield is between the Twin Cities and
Rochester
6Soils and a Carleton sense of place
- Rice County - edge county, but still rural
- Most land cultivated
- Animal (dairy, hogs, poultry, beef, etc.) and
crop (corn and soybeans) agriculture - Students resident for four years
7Carleton history of agriculture - 1
- Carleton dairy farm 1914-1964
- Two courses in ag. science taught early on (not
popular) - Farmhouse used as student housing (Natural
History house), 1971-present - Organic garden - 1990s
8Carleton History of Agriculture - 2
- Renewed student interest in environment,
agriculture starting in 1970s - Courses now taught include Sustainable
Agriculture (Bio.), The American Farm (Poli.
Sci), Agriculture and the American Midwest (Eng.
and Geo.), Population and Food in Global System
(SOAN), Geology of Soils
9Geology at Carleton
- Courses taught since 1870s
- Department founded in 1933 by Laurence McKinley
Gould (glacial and Quaternary geologist) - Robert Ruhe, 42, Carleton graduate
- Average of 22 graduating seniors each year since
1980 - Major requirements 7 geology courses, 2 math
courses, chemistry and physics
10Minnesota
Eastern margin of Late Quaternary deposits passes
through Northfield.
11Soils in Southeastern Minnesota
- Young soils (lt14,000 yr. BP) on till and outwash
on campus and west (little profile development) - Older soils on loess till east and south of
campus (few exposures) - Prairie/Forest boundary
- Extensive wetlands
- Mollisols, Entisols, Alfisols, Histosols
- Cretaceous weathering (ultisols) in Mn. RV
12Borderlands
- Forest and lakes in recently glaciated terrain
- Prairie on bedrock and (much) older glacial
material
13Factors of Soil Formation, SE Minnesota
- Parent material (Quaternary deposits, bedrock)
- Topography
- Vegetation (prairie, hardwood forest, wetland)
- Climate and time - Cretaceous, Early and Late
Quaternary - Human activity agriculture, forest clearance,
urbanization, suburbanization
14Geology courses with soils content
- Introductory Geology (some versions)
- Introduction to Environmental Geology -
stand-alone or as part of Agriculture and the
American Midwest - Geomorphology
- Oceans and Atmospheres
- Hydrology
- Geology of Soils
15Soils on Geology dept. field trips
- Northern Michigan - spodosols, paleosols
- SE and central Missouri - residual, cherty soils
on limestone bedrock, paleosols - Black Hills and Badlands, SD - sod table soils,
carbonate accumulations, paleosols - Baraboo, Wisconsin Northern Minnesota -
Quaternary deposits
16My growing view of soils 1979-2001
- Soils as physical and mineralogical systems
- Soils as a subset of Quaternary geology and
geomorphology - Soils as indicators of past climates and time
(paleoclimate and geochronologic reconstructions)
- Soils as the boundary between the lithosphere,
atmosphere, hydrosphere and biosphere central
to understanding global change
17Continuing education in soils
- Grad school - Soil Mechanics, Soil Mineralogy and
Behavior courses - Students - esp. Robb Jacobson, Richard Doyle
- Soils professionals on many field trips
- Pete Birkeland gets his own line
- Local soil resources people
18Carleton - Geology of Soils
- Taught since 1979, about every 2-3 years
- Enrollment range 12-36
- Prerequisite Introductory Geology
- Meets requirements for Geology Major,
concentrations in Environmental and Technology
Studies (ENTS) and Archaeology
19Two versions of Geology of Soils
- Texts - Singer and Munns Soils Birkeland, et
al., Soils. . .Applied Quaternary Geology (Utah
GMS) William Logan Bryant, Dirt The Ecstatic
Skin of the Earth - Emphasis - Soils as a biogeochemical system
- Text - Birkeland Soils and Geomorphology
- Emphasis - Weathering, pedogenesis, soils as
chronological markers, soil mechanics
20Geology of Soils Purpose and Questions
- Goal understand soils as a complex
biogeochemical system - Q1 What are the observable characteristics of
soils? - Q2 How do soils get to be this way?
- Q3 Why are these characteristics important (for
Quaternary geologists, environmental scientists,
archaeologists)?
21Geology of Soils - Class Projects
- Soils mapping (and profile description) of parent
material/topo sequence of Carleton Arboretum - Use outcrops of Precambrian and Cretaceous of MN
River Valley to repeat Goldichs weathering study - Compare mollisols east and west of
pedalfer/pedocal boundary - Prairie/forest boundary
- Literature/bibliographic and final lab projects
22Main topics - Geology of Soils
- Soil profile description
- Factors of soil formation
- Soils mapping and suitability
- Weathering and pedogenesis
- Soil conservation agriculture
- Organic soils
- Soil classification
- Soils for Quaternary geology and archaeology
23Local sources of information and help
- Natural Resources Conservation Service (Tom
Coffman) - Rice County Soil and Water Conservation District
(Theresa Weninger)
24Local sources of information and help
- University of Minnesota County Extension - Brad
Carlson - University of Minnesota Soils, Water and Climate
- Gyles Randall, David Mulla, Steve Simmons
- University of Minnesota County Extension - Brad
Carlson - University of Minnesota Soils, Water and Climate,
SROC - Gyles Randall, David Mulla, Steve Simmons
(agronomy)
25Studying a Soil Profile
26Visiting farms
27Animal agriculture and soils
Jirik farm (above) Southern Research and Outreach
Station, UMN (right)
28Student final projects, 1999
- Do the soils in the prairie restoration areas of
the arboretum exhibit significant differences in
soil texture? - Is the new proposed site for the Farm Club garden
appropriate for tilling, etc? How does it
compare to the old site? - How has pine planting affected soil development
in the lower arb?
29More student final projects
- What conservation practices are being used to
control water erosion on Rice County farms and
how effective are they? - What are the possible land uses and land use
restrictions imposed by soil properties near
Blue, Texas? - What are the soil differences between forest and
restored prairie near Nerstrand?
30Conclusions
- A soils course at a place like Carleton can
- help students develop a sense of place in rural
America - give students a grounding in agricultural
resources, both of the US and elsewhere - be an integral part of a geology major
- link environmental science and global
biogeochemistry courses
31Soils R Fun
- Pete Birkeland - CATENA supermarket
- Francis Holes Soil Songs
- Ian Smalley - Loess Inn
- William Bryant Logan - Dirt The Ecstatic Skin
of the Earth