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Lecture 3a Naming Soil Horizons Soil horizons (layers in the soil) are named so differences between soils can be identified. Naming soil horizons takes practice
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When soil scientists are describing a soil they will discuss a lot about what they are seeing and how it should be named. And what they are not seeing and what it should not be called ?
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Organic Horizons O - horizon - organic material (no mineral materials) 1) forest litter 2) organic soil or peat soils, or muck Oi - undecomposed (fibris) Oe - moderate decomp. (hemis) Oa - decomposed (sapric)
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Organic Soil Profile This trenching machine is digging through the Oe horizon of an organic soil. Trenches needed to remove water so the peat will dry before harvest.
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Organic Soil Horizons in a forest litter Oi Oe
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Processes of Mineral Soil Horizon Formation u A. Additions - H2O, organic matter,air, soil particles, salt u B. Losses - H2O, organic matter, CO2, nutrients by plant removal u C. Transformations - Changes to soil structure, development of clay minerals, weathering of minerals to elements, chemical Rx u D.Translocations - movement from one horizon to another of O.M. Clay, Water, Iron, & Nutrients in colloidal size, (very small particles) clay films on peds are evidence of this translocation = clay (film) coating
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Mineral Soil Horizons A horizon - surface horizons that accumulate O.M. Ap = plowed soil Ap EB Bt BC C
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E Horizons E - (formerly A2) - Translocation out - Zone of Eluviations - Leaching out lighter in color than horizons above or below A E E/ B Bt BC C
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B Horizons- two kinds : a) Translocation in - below an A, E, or O with an accumulation of clay, iron, humus (O.M. decomposed.) or carbonates (CaCO3) zones of illuviation b) or alteration of the original parent material, development of color or structure - Bw Bt
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C Horizons C - little affected by pedogenic processes and lack properties of O-A-B- E- or is the Parent Material C horizon Solum = A + B
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Rock Horizons R = hard rock Cr = Soft Rock
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Subscripts - all B horizons have a subscript, most transition horizons do not. * a - sapric - organic soils - well decomposed * b - buried soil horizon d - dense - geogenic soil material (compacted by glacier) * e - hemic - mod. decomp. - organic soil f - frozen soil - permanently frozen, permafrost * g - gleyed soil - gray color due to low O2 - reduction of Fe * h - accumulation of humus - O.M. other than in the A or O horizons * i - fibric - organic - non-decomposed * k - accumulation of calcium carbonate (CaCO3) * m - cementation - hard - indurated
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u n - sodium accumulation u * p - plowing - only used with A u q - silica accumulation - very weathered or old soil u * r - soft rock - used with C or Cr u * s - sesquioxides (1.502) (Fe2O3) accumulation of Fe and Al - red color u *ss – slickensides present –shiny surface on ped face caused from soil rubbing against soil u * t - clay accumulation - clay films u * w - color or structure development (Bw) u x - Fragipan - hard, dense layer that developed with time u y - gypsum accumulation (CaSO4) u z - salts more soluble than gypsum (KCL - NaCl - NaSO4) Subscripts cont.
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Transition Horizons AB - Like A - some of B BA - Like B - some of A AE AC BC E/B - Both E and B particles are present - “B & E” used for soils with Lamellae - thin bands of accumulating clay and iron in sandy soils
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