o soils are a fertile, natural resource. o soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one...

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Page 1: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials
Page 2: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

o Soils are a fertile, natural resource.

o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials.

Page 3: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

o Soil is composed (made-up) of:o Mineral Particles (pieces) weathered

or eroded from the soil’s parent rock (original) over a long period of time.

o Mineral particles make up about 45% of a soil.

o Examples of mineral particles: calcium from limestone (original rock).

Page 4: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

o Air is found in spaces (pores) between soil particles.

o Air supplies oxygen and nitrogen that help plants to grow.

o Air makes up 25% of a soil

Page 5: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

Water is found also in spaces (pores) between soil particles.

Water dissolves soluble minerals and moves fertile minerals to roots in plants.

Water generally makes up 25% of a soil. – in deserts there is so little water that no vegetation can grow.

Page 6: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

The remains of dead plants and animals. Dead plants are broken down into humus

by micro-organisms (earthworms, fungi). Humus darkens the soil and increases

fertility and is found near the surface. Organic matter makes up about 5% of a

soil usually.

Page 7: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials
Page 8: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials
Page 9: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

There are 6 major factors taken into account when describing the characteristics (qualities) of soil.

1 - Colour 2 - Structure 3 - Texture 4 - Organic content (Humus) 5 - PH Value (acidity) 6 - Water (content and retention)

Page 10: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

3 major characteristics:1 - Texture2 - Structure3 - Water content and retention.

Page 11: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

The texture refers to the smoothness or coarseness (roughness) of soil.

The texture depends on the size of the soil particles, which affects the pore spaces (gaps) between the soil particles.

The different pore spaces mean that soils will have different:Aeration (amount of air)Drainage (water passing through)

Page 12: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

Sandy soils Clay soils

Loam soils

Page 13: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

Rough / coarse and loose textures. Large pores between particles so air

and water can pass through them. Little water logging so the particles

don’t stick together. Leaching of nutrients can occur and

during a dry spell there may be a shortage of water.

Page 14: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials
Page 15: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

Smooth with small soil particles and are packed closely together (tight-fitting particles).

Very tiny pores so they prevent water and air passing through them.

Waterlogged in winter due to heavy rain (heavy / sticky) and hard, dry cracked surfaces in summer.

High in nutrients as they don’t allow leaching.

Page 16: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials
Page 17: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials
Page 18: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

Form from roughly equal amounts of sand and clay particles.

Moderate pore sizes allow air and drainage.

They usually don’t become waterlogged in winter or too dry in summer.

Light soils and high in nutrients so ideal for agriculture.

Page 19: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials
Page 20: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials
Page 21: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

Soil structure describes how soil grains are lumped (cemented) together by humus and water.

The grains of soil are in small lumps (cling together) called Peds.

The structure of the soil depends on the shape of the peds.

The spaces (pores) between the peds allow the soil to: Hold air and water or Let air or water through.

Page 22: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials
Page 23: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

The main soil structures are: Crumb (granular) – allow air

and water to pass through. Platy – where the peds are

flat and overlap and prevent water from passing through (water logging occurs).

Page 24: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials
Page 25: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

The amount of water in a soil or the amount of water a soil can retain (hold in) depends mainly on:

Texture Structure Humus.

Page 26: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

Coarse sandy soils have large pores so they allow water to pass through (little retention).

Small grained clay soils don’t allow water to pass through so they are poorly drained.

Page 27: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

Crumb (granular) structure allow water to pass through, so they can dry up quickly.

Platy structure restrict water movement so they have a large amount of water.

Page 28: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

Soils rich in humus can hold more water than those with a low humus content.

Page 29: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

Soils vary – no two soils are identical in texture or appearance.

Processes occurring within soils produce differences in texture, structure, colour etc.

The major processes are: 1 - Leaching and podzolisation 2 - Laterisation 3 - Humification 4 - Weathering.

Page 30: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

Leaching occurs when heavy rainfall percolates (soaks) down through soils.

The rainwater: Washes soluble substances down through the soils Can dissolve minerals and humus from the upper layers.

Though leaching is needed to bring humus to lower layers, it is often so great that the nutrients are brought so far down in soils that plant roots can’t reach them – making the soils infertile.

Page 31: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

This can happen in sandy soils (permeable, loosely packed grain structure) as rainwater can pass through very quickly.

Podzolisation is leaching that occurs in regions where there is:Heavy rainfall e.g. Irish mountains.A large amount of humic acids e.g.

Under bogs or coniferous forests. The humic acids cause the rainwater to

become so acidic that it dissolves most of the soil nutrients.

Page 32: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials
Page 33: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

Laterisation is an extreme form of leaching that occurs in equatorial and tropical regions due to a combination of: Heavy rainfall High temperature.

The heavy rainfall is the major factor as it washes the nutrients down through the soil.

The high temperatures: Speed up the chemical reactions of water on the minerals Break down iron into iron oxide (rust).

The iron oxide gives the soil a red, rusty colour and the soils are sometimes called tropical red soils.

Page 34: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials
Page 35: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

Sugar cane thrives in some red soils

Page 36: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

There is dead organic matter (remains of dead plants and animals) in most soils.

Micro-organisms (bacteria, fungi) cause the dead organic matter to decay slowly into a black gel.

Oxygen (from air in the soil) also helps in the breakdown of organic matter in humus.

Rain washes the humus into the soil and it is used by plant roots as a nutrient.

Page 37: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials
Page 38: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials

Weathering helps to break down the parent (original) rock into the mineral part of the soil:

Physical / mechanical weathering breaks the rock into minerals e.g. Freeze-thaw in Irish mountains.

Chemical weathering causes rocks to decay / decompose e.g. Carbonation causes calcium carbonate in limestone to dissolve.

Page 39: o Soils are a fertile, natural resource. o Soils develop / form from the weathering of rocks in one place and from re-deposited weathered materials