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Soil Physical Properties
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Soil Physical Properties
Color Texture Density (particle density vs. bulk density) Pore space (porosity) Structure Aggregate stability
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Physical properties are important
1) Control plant growth through influence on: Soil temperature (darker = warmer) Soil aeration (sandy soils well aerated) Soil moisture content (clayey soils stay wet) 2) Indicate important characteristics of a soil e.g., lots vs. little organic matter
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Objectives Know what color tells you about a soil
Describe the concept of soil texture and its importance Use the textural triangle to determine a soil’s textural class based on its sand, silt and clay content
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Physical properties – Color
covaries with O.M. Fe and Al oxides moisture saturation mineralogy (e.g., calcite, hematite=Fe2O3)
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Color “quantified” using the Munsell system
Hue (e.g., 10YR) tells you general shade (red, yellow); DOES NOT tell you how dark the soil is Value (e.g., 10YR 5/6) tells you how dark the soil is: 0 is darkest Chroma (e.g., 10YR 5/6) tells you brightness (0 = gray). Indicates moisture conditions (bright = dry)
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Go clockwise to numerically
Soil Color: Hue 10R 10Y 10YR 2.5 YR 5YR 7.5 YR 10R 10Y 10G 10B 10P 2.5 Y 5 Y 7.5 Y Go clockwise to numerically add next color!
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Color Chroma is used in defining wetlands.
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10YR page of Munsell color book
(also see Fig 4.1 of your text)
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Example Question Which soil horizon likely has more organic matter, one that is classified as 5R 5/6, or one that you decide is 10YR 1/7?
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