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Topic 1' The Soils Around Us

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The natural bodies in which plants grow. The foundations of houses and factories ... Edaphology. From the Greek word Edaphos', which also means soil or ground ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Topic 1' The Soils Around Us


1
Topic 1. The Soils Around Us
Environmental Soil Chemistry 12 January 2005
(900-1015 a.m.)
  • Professor Kyoung-Woong Kim
  • Soil Environment Laboratory
  • Department of Environmental Science and
    Engineering

Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology
2
Concepts of Soil
  • What is soil ?
  • The natural bodies in which plants grow
  • The foundations of houses and factories
  • Beds for roads and highways
  • Used to absorb waste from sewage systems
  • A reason for studying soils
  • What they are and how they can be used
  • Determining how best to conserve soils for
    future generations

3
Concepts of Soil
  • Definition of Soil (Alloway, 1995)
  • A complex heterogeneous medium comprising
    mineral and organic solids, aqueous and gaseous
    components
  • - Mineral
  • Weathering rock fragments and secondary
    minerals
  • - Organic matter
  • Living organisms, dead plant material, and
    colloidal humus
  • - Solid components
  • Interconnected voids (pores) of various size

4
Two Approaches Pedological and Edaphological
  • Pedology
  • From the Greek word Pedon, which means soil or
    earth
  • The origin of the soil, its classification, and
    its description
  • Treat soil as a natural entity
  • - a biochemically weathered and synthesized
    product of nature
  • Highway and construction engineers
  • Edaphology
  • From the Greek word Edaphos, which also means
    soil or ground
  • Soil from the standpoint of higher plants
  • Soil as a natural habitat for plants
  • Improving productivity

5
A Field View of Soil
  • Soil vs Regolith
  • Regolith unconsolidated material overlying rock
  • Horizon characteristic layering
  • Soil
  • - upper and biochemically weathered portion of
    the regolith
  • - the product of both destructive and synthetic
    forces

6
The Soil Profile and Layers (Horizons)
Profile vertical section of a soil
  • A horizon
  • - Darker than the lower horizon
  • - Due to the accumulation of organic matter
  • - Some products of weathering
  • B horizon
  • An accumulation of varying accounts Si-clays,
    iron and aluminum oxides, gypsum, an calcium
    carbonate
  • A depth of 1-2 (m) representative of temperate
    region soils
  • Gradual transition

7
Topsoil and Subsoil
  • Topsoil
  • The upper 12-18 (cm)
  • Plowed and cultivated
  • Major zone of root development for crop
  • Profile
  • Not commonly disturbed by soil tillage
  • Crop production affected by root penetration,
    moisture nutrient
  • Land-use decision nature of the subsoil

8
Mineral (Inorganic) and Organic Soils
  • Mineral (Inorganic) soil
  • Comparatively low in organic matter which
    generally ranges 1-6
  • Organic Soil
  • Dominated by organic material contain more than
    50 organic matter by volume (at least 20 by
    weight)

9
Major Components of Mineral Soils
Major components Inorganic or mineral materials,
organic matter, water, and air
  • Loam surface soil
  • - 45 soil volume
  • - 5 organic matter
  • - 25 water space
  • - 25 air
  • Subsoil
  • - lower in organic matter
  • - lower in total pore space
  • - higher percentage of small pores

10
Mineral (Inorganic) Constituents in Soils
  • Size and composition stone, gravel ( gt 2mm ),
    sand (0.05 2 mm), silt (0.002-0.05 mm), clay (
    lt 0.0002 mm), colloid ( lt 1 um)
  • Soil texture sandy loam, silty caly and clay
    loam

Table 1.1 General Properties of Tree Major
Inorganic Soil Particles.
11
Mineral (Inorganic) Constituents in Soils
  • Primary and Secondary Minerals
  • Inorganic fraction the original source of the
    mineral elements
  • Soil Structure
  • The arrangement of the sand, silt, and clay
    particles

12
Soil Organic Matter
  • Organic Matter
  • An accumulation of potentially disintegrated and
    decomposed plant and animal residues and other
    organic compounds
  • Binding mineral particles into granules
  • Major soil source of phosphorus, sulfur, and
    nitrogen
  • Humus
  • Complex compounds that are relatively resistant
    to decay

13
Soil Water A Dynamic Solution
  • Water - held in the soil pores
  • Soluble constituents Soil water ? Soil
    Solution
  • The movement of soil water
  • Downward in response to gravity
  • Upward to replace that lost by evaporation
  • The water in the large and intermediate size
    pores
  • ? The water in the tiny pores and in thin films
  • Not all soil water is available to plants

14
Soil Water A Dynamic Solution
  • Soil Solution
  • Containing small but significant quantities of
    soluble inorganic and organic compounds
  • Critical property of the soil solution
  • pH
  • Influence the solubility, and the availability
    to plants of several elements

15
Soil Air Another Changeable Constituent
  • Soil air
  • The composition dynamic and varies from place
    to place
  • Higher moisture content and CO2 and lower O2 than
    in the atmosphere
  • The content and composition
  • Determined by the water content of the soil
  • After a heavy rain or irrigation large ? medium
    ? small pores
  • Drainage sequence
  • Soils with a high proportion of tiny pores to be
    poorly aerated

16
The soil A Rich and Varied Biological Laboratory
  • Quantity of living organisms
  • Influence the physical, chemical, and biological
    properties of soils
  • Processes of decay
  • Release from organic forms of essential plant
    nutrient (N, P, S)

17
Clay and Humus The Seat of Soil Activity
  • Clay and humus
  • A large surface area and surface charge
  • Cation exchange capacity
  • - Determining the suitability of soils
  • - Humus greater nutrient and water holding
    capacities
  • - Clay larger amount

18
Interaction of Components - Supplying Plant
Nutrients
  • Four major soil components minerals, organic
    matter, water, and air
  • The bulk of most nutrient elements
  • Molecular or structural framework of primary and
    secondary minerals, organic matter, and soil
    solution
  • Essential element availability

19
Soil and Plant Relations
  • Use of essential elements for crop production
  • Absorb the essential nutrients
  • Chemical carrier in plant cells
  • Microorganisms in the vicinity of roots

20
  • Thank you for your attention !!
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