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Soil Profile Linda Giorno Fall 2006
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What is the difference between soil and dirt? Dirt is what you find under your fingernails. Soil is what you find under your feet.
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Soil Characteristics A thin living skin that covers the land. Even the most fertile topsoil is only a foot or so deep.
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Soil Profile The horizontal layers (horizons) in the soil from the surface to the bedrock.
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Ground Level (O) Plants grow and animals live here. A thick cover of plants can keep the soil cool and keep it from drying out. Decomposers recycle dead plants and animals into humus. O layer is about 2 inches in depth.
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Decomposer An organism that breaks down dead plant and animal organic matter. Most decomposers are bacteria and other fungi.
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Organic matter All of the matter in the soil that first came from living things—plants, animals, fungi, and protozoa. It may be fresh or decomposed.
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Top Soil (A) Plants grow and animals live on top of the soil. A thick cover of plants can keep the soil cool and keep it from drying out. Decomposers recycle dead plants and animals into humus. A layer is about 10 inches in depth
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Root Fungus
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Round Worms
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Earthworm
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Humus The matter left over after all the nutrients and minerals are gone from dead plant and animal matter.
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Uses for Humus Humus can be used as a root stimulant, chemical free fertilizer, plant growth stimulant, or lawn fertilizer. Humus is vital to the growth of plants because it helps balance the soil and increases the metabolism of a plant’s natural root system.
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Sub Soil (B) This is a mix of mineral particles and some humus near the top. Subsoil is very low in organic matter compared to the topsoil. This is the layer where most of the soil's nutrients are found. B layer is about 30 inches in depth.
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Weathered parent material This horizon can be very deep. There's no organic matter here at all. It's all rock particles, full of minerals. The entire soil profile used to look like this all the way to the surface. Physical weathering broke the parent material up into small pieces.
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Parent material (C) The non-living part of all soil comes from the parent material. It may be broken off of bedrock underneath. Or a glacier, wind, or water, can pile up material removed from bedrock somewhere else. C layer is usually about 48 inches deep.
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Bedrock (R) We finally found solid rock! The bedrock formed before the soil above it.
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