Copyright © 2010 Delmar, Cengage Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Chapter 5 Soil Materials and Formation.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Soil Origin and Development
Advertisements

UNIT C. Section 1 Basic Principles of Agricultural/Horticultural Science.
Basic Principles of Agricultural/Horticultural Science
Chapter 2 Weathering & Soil
Chemical & Mechanical Weathering How is soil formed?
Chapter 12: Weathering.
Weathering & Soils Mr. Manzo.
Weathering and Erosion
Student Learning Objectives
Soils.
Unit: Soil Science Lesson 1
Weathering, Erosion, and Soil
The Rock Cycle.
Animal, Plant & Soil Science Lesson D1-3 Soil Profile.
Rocks, Minerals, and Soil. Choose your Topic: Note: After completing each section, click the “Home” button to return to this screen. Minerals Rocks The.
The Art of Breaking things… Weathering and Soil. Weathering ► Weathering is the physical breakdown (disintegration) and chemical alteration (decomposition)
© 2013 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Soil Origin and Development
Soils NR 200 Unit 2 Formation of Soils From Parent Materials.
SOILS ONE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT SUBSTANCES IN THE WORLD!
Weathering.
Soil & Soil Dynamics.
SOIL ORIGIN and DEVELOPMENT
Rock Cycle Homework: Read Do Cornell notes (key terms and Vocab)
AP Environmental Science Trotter ROCKSMINERALS  Heterozygous  Can be organic or non- organic  Follow the rock cycle  Three types: sedimentary,
WEATHERING CHAPTER 12 Sections 12.1 and 12.2.
Chapter 7- Weathering, Erosion and Soil
Chapter 14 Weathering and Erosion
Weathering Weathering
Weathering, Erosion, and Soils Mandy Meeks, Baldwin Arts and Academics Magnet, Earth Science.
Environmental Factors Soils Earth’s Surface 770 % Water 330 % Land OOnly 10 % of land is arable (suitable for cultivation) OOf this arable land,
Soil Origin and Development
Rock Formation Activity #19.
Write briefly about a truly scientific observation you made over the break. I will only call on 3 of you to share.
Soils Chapter 5. SOIL Is the soft material that covers the surface of the earth and provides a place for the growth of plant roots. It also contains minerals,
Chapter 5 Weathering and Soil
BELL RINGER What makes up soil? (name at least 3) Why is soil important to humans? (name two reasons) What is the average thickness of topsoil?
Weathering and Erosion
Soil Origin and Development
Weathering of Rocks Hoodoos More Resistant layer.
Rock Types And Classifications. Igneous Igneous rocks are fire formed They originate from the magma in the mantle of the Earth. Extrusive igneous rocks.
Topic 2: Rocks and The Rock Cycle  Rocks are classified into 3 major groups:  Igneous Rock  Sedimentary Rock  Metamorphic Rock.
Rocks, Minerals, Rock Cycle Fossils, Superposition, Soil
TEST REVIEW Rock Cycle & Weathering. A. THE EXACT AGE OF AN OBJECT B. THE ORDER OF EVENTS OVER TIME C. THE COLOR OF AN OBJECT D. THE BEHAVIORS OF AN ORGANISM.
Unit 17 STRUCTURE OF THE EARTH. What are the different types of rocks? IGNEOUS ROCKS formed from molten rocks (magma) that flow to the Earth’s surface.
The Cycling of Matter Ch. 3 Lesson 4. Key Concept: Over time, matter- such as rock, water, carbon, and nitrogen- is transferred between organisms and.
The Fabulous World of Soil Soil What is it? What is it made of?
Weathering and Erosion
Chapter 7. Erosion : removal and transport of weathered material from one location to another. Weathering : chemical and physical processes by which rocks.
Weathering  It is surface processes that break down rock  Breaks rocks into smaller and smaller pieces  Ex.) Sand, silt, clay  The formation of soil.
SOIL ORIGIN AND NATURE, FORMATION OF SOILS. Soil develops from parent material by the processes of soil formation The process of formation soil from the.
Weathering, Soils, & Erosion. #1 Weathering is the break up of rock due to exposure to processes that occur at the Earth’s surface. Weathering is the.
Soil Origin and Development
Soil Formation 6.E.2.3 Explain how the formation of soil is related to the parent rock type and the environment in which it develops.
Weathering, Erosion, and Soil Notes
What’s it good for, anyway?
Chapter 12: Weathering & Erosion
Weathering.
Chapter 7 – Weathering and Erosion
Explaining a Soil Profile
Soil Profile & Horizons
Soil Profile & Horizons
All About Soil.
Soil and Vegetation.
Chapter 2 Weathering & Soil
Basic Principles of Agricultural/Horticultural Science
Chemical & Mechanical Weathering
3 Types of Rocks.
Chapter 2 Weathering & Soil
Weathering.
Presentation transcript:

Copyright © 2010 Delmar, Cengage Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Chapter 5 Soil Materials and Formation

Copyright © 2010 Delmar, Cengage Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Soil Makeup, Origins, and Use Soft material covering Earth’s surface Formed by heating, cooling, water, wind, decomposing plant/animal material Provides place for plant’s roots to grow; food and water for plants; home for small animals

Copyright © 2010 Delmar, Cengage Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Soil Body Top—where atmosphere or shallow water begins Bottom—farthest reach of deepest rooted plants Pedon—section of soil (usually about 3' x 3' x 5' deep) used to study soil makeup of particular area

Copyright © 2010 Delmar, Cengage Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Soil Formation All soil begins with solid rock, which is broken into smaller pieces by weathering –Physical: temperature, water, wind, root wedging, other factors –Chemical: dissolution, hydrolysis, hydration, oxidation- reduction

Copyright © 2010 Delmar, Cengage Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Rocks of Earth’s Crust Igneous—formed by cooling and solidification of molten materials deep in Earth Examples: –granite (made of feldspar, quartz, other minerals): harder, coarse-grained –basalt: softer, fine-grained

Copyright © 2010 Delmar, Cengage Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Rocks of Earth’s Crust (continued) Sedimentary—formed by loose materials like mud or sand being deposited by water, wind, other agents –slowly cemented by chemicals and/or pressure into rock –overlays 3/4 of igneous crust Examples: sandstone, limestone

Copyright © 2010 Delmar, Cengage Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Rocks of Earth’s Crust (continued) Metamorphic—igneous or sedimentary rocks subjected to great heat/pressure –limestone subjected to great heat and pressure changes to marble –soils arising from metamorphic parent materials resemble soils from original sedimentary or igneous rock

Copyright © 2010 Delmar, Cengage Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Soil-Forming Factors Five traditional factors –parent material –time –climate –organisms –topography One additional factor: humans

Copyright © 2010 Delmar, Cengage Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Parent Material Rock or other material in which soil is formed; limestone most common Affected by glaciers, wind, water, gravity, volcanic deposits, organic deposits

Copyright © 2010 Delmar, Cengage Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Time Young soils—low in nitrogen, high in phosphorus Mature soils—generally productive Old soils—high in nitrogen, low in phosphorus, become more severely weathered, more highly leached, often less productive

Copyright © 2010 Delmar, Cengage Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Climate 1st effect—physical and chemical weathering of rock 2nd effect—temperature and rainfall –higher temperature, faster chemical reaction –rainfall leaches lime, clay, plant nutrients, other chemicals

Copyright © 2010 Delmar, Cengage Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Organisms Plants, insects, microbes –grassland soil: highest organic matter –forest soil: less organic matter –desert soil: least organic matter –vegetation also affects location of nutrients and other ions in the soil

Copyright © 2010 Delmar, Cengage Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Topography and Human Factor Topography—soil’s position in landscape influences soil development mainly by affecting water movement Human—rapid, dramatic, and different from other factors –Examples: air pollution and earth moving

Copyright © 2010 Delmar, Cengage Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Soil Horizons and Profile Horizons—layers where additions, losses, translocations, transformations happen Profile—vertical section through soil extending into unweathered parent material that exposes all horizons

Copyright © 2010 Delmar, Cengage Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Horizons Master — A: topsoil; B: subsoil; C: parent material Other — O: organic layer—generally undisturbed — E: greatest eluviation, or loss by leaching — R: underlying hard bedrock