BELL RINGER 2.4.13 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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BELL RINGER 2.4.13

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BELL RINGER 2.4.13 What makes up soil? What is topsoil? What is the average amount of topsoil? * * Introduction to Soils The most important natural resource around ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: BELL RINGER 2.4.13


1
BELL RINGER 2.4.13
  • What makes up soil?
  • What is topsoil?
  • What is the average amount of topsoil?

2
Introduction to Soils
  • The most important natural resource around the
    earth!

3
What is soil?
  • Defined as
  • Mineral Organic material that supports plant
    growth on the earths surface
  • Mixture of particles of rock, organic materials,
    living forms, air, water

4
What soil resources help in supporting life?
  • Oxygen needed for adequate root growth
  • Temperature soil absorbs heat from the sun
    loses heat to atmosphere (plant growth and seed
    germination)
  • Water plant growth
  • Carbon organic matter
  • Minerals nutrients and physical makeup

5
Briefly explain the process of soil origin.
  • All soil originated as rocks.
  • Powerful forces act on the rocks to break them
    down into smaller fragments.
  • Water penetrates the cracks in the rock and when
    it freezes the water acts as a wedge to split the
    rock.

6
Soil origin cont.
  • Rivers, glaciers, landslides and avalanches cause
    rock particles to grind against each other
    wearing them down.
  • Chemicals mix with water to further break the
    rocks down.
  • Plants began to grow in the weathered rocks and
    as they die, they add organic matter to the soil
    which attracts soil micro-organisms.

7
Soil origin cont.
  • When this happens, then the soil is capable of
    supporting plant life and can then truly be
    called soil.

8
What does the term weathering mean?
  • Weathering is the processes that occur to break
    down rock into soil.
  • This process includes water freezing, thawing,
    landslides, wind and chemical action.

9
What is parent material?
  • Rock material that has undergone some weathering
    and change, but not enough to be called true
    soil, as it is not capable of sustaining plant
    life.

10
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11
List the 5 factors responsible for soil
development.
  1. Parent material
  2. Climate
  3. Variation in the earths surface (topography)
  4. Plant animal life
  5. Time

12
Parent Material
  • Parent rock from which a soil is formed has a
    significant effect on its qualities.
  • Parent materials influence the formation of soils
    by their rates of weathering, the nutrients that
    they supply, and the particle sizes that they
    contain.
  • The less developed a soil is, the more influence
    that the parent material has on its
    characteristics.
  • Mineral particle size has a great effect on the
    properties of soil in the field.

13
Climate
  • Climate is a dominant factor in the formation of
    soils.
  • The major components of climate that affect soil
    are precipitation and temperature.
  • With low rainfall an accumulation of lime may
    occur ,so these soils are usually alkaline.
  • In areas of high rainfall there is intense
    weathering and leaching resulting in acid soils.

14
Climate continued
  • Erosion of sloping lands removes developing
    layers of soil and deposits them down slope.
  • Erosion, leaching and weathering are more intense
    and take place over a longer period each year in
    warm and humid areas.
  • Climate also has an indirect affect on soils by
    its action on vegetation.
  • Changes in temperature affect the rate of
    physical/chemical weathering. Rates of chemical
    reactions increase as temperature increases, if
    sufficient water is also present.

15
Topography
  • Topography (the lay of the land) influences
    drainage and runoff.
  • The profile on gentle slopes will be generally
    deeper, sustain more luxuriant vegetation, and
    contain more organic matter than soil profiles on
    steeper slopes.
  •  
  • In our hemisphere, mountains often affect the
    climate and in turn the soil. The western side
    of a mountain range often receive more rain and
    have more developed soil vs. the drier east side
    of a mountain.

16
Living Organisms
  • The activity of living plants and animals (macro
    and microorganisms) has major significance on the
    development of soil.
  • Microorganisms help develop soils by decomposing
    organic matter and forming weak acids that
    dissolve minerals faster than would pure water.
  •  
  • Fibrous root systems of grasses have a distinctly
    different effect on soils than do the coarser
    roots of trees.
  • Lichens, which are a combination of algae and
    fungi, are often the first plants that grow on
    weathering rocks.

17
Time
  • It requires time, up to about a million years, to
    form soils.
  • Rocks like granite are extremely hard to
    decompose. Softer rocks such as limestone take
    less time.
  • As soils age they differentiate into defined
    profiles consisting of three different layers (A
    horizon, B horizon and C horizon).
  • Horizons tend to develop faster under humid,
    warm, and forested conditions.
  • A recognizable soil profile may develop in as few
    as 200 years or, under less favorable conditions,
    take several thousand years to develop.

18
Components of Soil
  • Mineral Matter about 45 of soil (partially
    decomposed rock material (sand, silt, clay)
  • Organic Matter about 5 of soil (partially
    decomposed plant animal matter)
  • Air about 25 of soil (constant fluctuation as
    soil is dry and wet)
  • Water about 25 of soil

19
Water in the soil
  • Infiltration process of water soaking into the
    soil (surface downward)
  • Percolation water movement downward through soil
    and rock (below the surface)
  • Permeable quality of soil that allows for both
    infiltration and percolation then it is said to
    be permeable

20
Living Organisms in the soil
  • Forms of life
  • Earthworms
  • Insects
  • Bacteria
  • Fungi
  • Other organisms

21
Bacteria Fungi Jobs
  • Break down organic matter and release nutrients

22
Earthworm other soil organism jobs
  • Improve soil tilth
  • Ease at which soil can be worked
  • Create openings in soil as they tunnel
  • Enhances drainage and improves air exchange

23
Plants use soil
  • Anchorage roots
  • Water absorbed through roots
  • Oxygen all living organisms need oxygen
  • -plants release oxygen during photosynthesis and
    consume oxygen during respiration
  • -good soil aeration needed for below ground plant
    parts to get oxygen

24
Plants use soil cont.
  • D. Nutrients of the 16 essential nutrients for
    plant growth 13 are obtained from the soil
  • -root hairs absorb the nutrients dissolved in
    soil water

25
Soil uses in agriculture
  • Cropland
  • Grazing land
  • Forest
  • Water structures
  • Agriculture depends on soil to grow food, fiber,
    and ornamental plants.

26
Nonagricultural uses of soil
  • Recreation playgrounds, sports fields, jogging
    paths, golf courses, parks, campgrounds
  • Foundations buildings have to have solid base
  • Waste Disposal
  • Building materials
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