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Pedology (soil study)

 

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Pedology (soil study)



 
 
Pedology (from Greek: p?d??, pedon, "soil"; and ?????, logos, "study") is the study of soils in their natural environment. It is one of two main branches of soil science
Soil science

Soil science is the study of soil as a natural resource on the surface of the earth including pedogenesis, soil classification and mapping; physical, chemical, biological, and fertility properties of soils; and these properties in relation to the use and management of soils....
, the other being edaphology
Edaphology

Edaphology is one of two main divisions of soil science, the other being pedology . Edaphology is concerned with the influence of soils on living things, particularly plants....
. Pedology deals with pedogenesis
Pedogenesis

Pedogenesis or soil evolution is the process by which soil is created. It is the major topic of the science of pedology , whose other aspects include the soil morphology, soil classification of soils, and their distribution in nature, present and past ....
, soil morphology
Soil morphology

Soil morphology is the field observable attributes of the soil within the various soil horizons and the description of the kind and arrangement of the horizons....
, and soil classification
Soil classification

Soil classification deals with the systematic categorization of soils based on distinguishing characteristics as well as criteria that dictate choices in use....
, while edaphology studies the way soils influence plants, fungi, and other living things.

Overview
Soil
Soil

Soil is the naturally occurring, unconsolidated or loose covering on the Earth's surface. Soil is composed of particles of broken rock that have been altered by chemical and environmental processes including weathering and erosion....
 is not only a support for vegetation, but it is also the zone (the pedosphere
Pedosphere

The pedosphere is the outermost layer of the Earth that is composed of soil and subject to pedogenesis. It exists at the interface of the lithosphere, Earth's atmosphere, hydrosphere and biosphere....
) of numerous interactions between climate
Climate

Climate encompasses the temperatures, humidity, atmospheric pressure, winds, rainfall, atmospheric particle count and numerous other Meteorology elements in a given region over long periods of time, as opposed to the term weather, which refers to current activity of these same elements....
 (water, air, temperature), soil life
Soil life

Soil life or soil biota is a collective term for all the organisms living within the soil....
 (micro-organisms, plants, animals) and its residues, the mineral
Mineral

A mineral is a naturally occurring solid formed through Geology processes that has a characteristic chemical composition, a highly ordered atomic structure, and specific physical properties....
 material of the original and added rock
Rock (geology)

In geology, rock is a naturally occurring solid aggregate of minerals and/or mineraloids.The Earth's outer solid layer, the lithosphere, is made of rock....
, and its position in the landscape.






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Encyclopedia


Pedology (from Greek: p?d??, pedon, "soil"; and ?????, logos, "study") is the study of soils in their natural environment. It is one of two main branches of soil science
Soil science

Soil science is the study of soil as a natural resource on the surface of the earth including pedogenesis, soil classification and mapping; physical, chemical, biological, and fertility properties of soils; and these properties in relation to the use and management of soils....
, the other being edaphology
Edaphology

Edaphology is one of two main divisions of soil science, the other being pedology . Edaphology is concerned with the influence of soils on living things, particularly plants....
. Pedology deals with pedogenesis
Pedogenesis

Pedogenesis or soil evolution is the process by which soil is created. It is the major topic of the science of pedology , whose other aspects include the soil morphology, soil classification of soils, and their distribution in nature, present and past ....
, soil morphology
Soil morphology

Soil morphology is the field observable attributes of the soil within the various soil horizons and the description of the kind and arrangement of the horizons....
, and soil classification
Soil classification

Soil classification deals with the systematic categorization of soils based on distinguishing characteristics as well as criteria that dictate choices in use....
, while edaphology studies the way soils influence plants, fungi, and other living things.

Overview


Soil
Soil

Soil is the naturally occurring, unconsolidated or loose covering on the Earth's surface. Soil is composed of particles of broken rock that have been altered by chemical and environmental processes including weathering and erosion....
 is not only a support for vegetation, but it is also the zone (the pedosphere
Pedosphere

The pedosphere is the outermost layer of the Earth that is composed of soil and subject to pedogenesis. It exists at the interface of the lithosphere, Earth's atmosphere, hydrosphere and biosphere....
) of numerous interactions between climate
Climate

Climate encompasses the temperatures, humidity, atmospheric pressure, winds, rainfall, atmospheric particle count and numerous other Meteorology elements in a given region over long periods of time, as opposed to the term weather, which refers to current activity of these same elements....
 (water, air, temperature), soil life
Soil life

Soil life or soil biota is a collective term for all the organisms living within the soil....
 (micro-organisms, plants, animals) and its residues, the mineral
Mineral

A mineral is a naturally occurring solid formed through Geology processes that has a characteristic chemical composition, a highly ordered atomic structure, and specific physical properties....
 material of the original and added rock
Rock (geology)

In geology, rock is a naturally occurring solid aggregate of minerals and/or mineraloids.The Earth's outer solid layer, the lithosphere, is made of rock....
, and its position in the landscape. During its formation and genesis, the soil profile slowly deepens and develops characteristic layers, called 'horizons', while a steady state balance is approached.

Soil users (such as agronomist
Agronomist

Agronomists are scientists who specialize in agronomy, which is the science of utilizing plants for food, fuel, feed, and fiber....
s) showed initially little concern in the dynamics of soil. They saw it as medium whose chemical, physical and biological properties were useful for the services of agronomic productivity . On the other hand, pedologists and geologists did not initially focus on the agronomic applications of the soil characteristics (edaphic properties) but upon its relation to the nature and history of landscapes. Today, there's an integration of the two disciplinary approaches as part of landscape and environmental sciences.

Pedologists are now also interested in the practical applications of a good understanding of pedogenesis
Pedogenesis

Pedogenesis or soil evolution is the process by which soil is created. It is the major topic of the science of pedology , whose other aspects include the soil morphology, soil classification of soils, and their distribution in nature, present and past ....
 processes (the evolution and functioning of soils), like interpreting its environmental history and predicting consequences of changes in land use, while agronomists understand that the cultivated soil is a complex medium, often resulting from several thousands of years of evolution. They understand that the current balance is fragile and that only a thorough knowledge of its history makes it possible to ensure its sustainable
Sustainable development

Sustainable development is a pattern of resource use that aims to meet human needs while preserving the environment so that these needs can be met not only in the present, but in the indefinite future....
 use.

Concepts


  • Complexity in soil genesis
    Pedogenesis

    Pedogenesis or soil evolution is the process by which soil is created. It is the major topic of the science of pedology , whose other aspects include the soil morphology, soil classification of soils, and their distribution in nature, present and past ....
     is more common than simplicity.
  • Soils lie at the interface of Earth's atmosphere
    Earth's atmosphere

    The Earth's atmosphere is a layer of gases surrounding the planet Earth that is retained by the Earth's gravity. Dry air contains roughly 78.08% nitrogen, 20.95% oxygen, 0.93% argon, 0.038% Carbon dioxide in the Earth's atmosphere, and trace amounts of other gases....
    , biosphere
    Biosphere

    The biosphere is the global sum of all ecosystems. From the broadest Geophysiology point of view, the biosphere is the global ecology system integrating all living beings and their relationships, including their interaction with the elements of the lithosphere, hydrosphere, and Earth's atmosphere....
    , hydrosphere
    Hydrosphere

    A hydrosphere in physical geography describes the combined mass of water found on, under, and over the surface of a planet....
     and lithosphere
    Lithosphere

    File:Plates tect2 en.svgFile:Earth-crust-cutaway-english.svgThe lithosphere is the rigid outermost shell of a rocky planet....
    . Therefore, a thorough understanding of soils requires some knowledge of meteorology
    Meteorology

    Meteorology is the interdisciplinary scientific study of the Earth's atmosphere that focuses on weather processes and forecasting . Studies in the field stretch back millennia, though significant progress in meteorology did not occur until the eighteenth century....
    , climatology
    Climatology

    Climatology is the study of climate, scientifically defined as weather conditions averaged over a period of time, and is a branch of the atmospheric sciences....
    , ecology
    Ecology

    Ecology is the science study of the distribution and Abundance of life and the interactions between organisms and their nature environment ....
    , biology
    Biology

    Biology is a branch of the natural sciences concerned with the study of living organisms and their interaction with each other and their environment ....
    , hydrology
    Hydrology

    Hydrology is the study of the movement, distribution, and quality of water throughout the Earth, and thus addresses both the hydrologic cycle and water resources....
    , geomorphology
    Geomorphology

    Geomorphology is the scientific study of landforms and the processes that shape them. Geomorphologists seek to understand why landscapes look the way they do: to understand landform history and dynamics, and predict future changes through a combination of field observation, physical experiment, and numerical mathematical model....
    , geology
    Geology

    Geology is the science and study of the solid and liquid matter that constitute the Earth. The field of geology encompasses the study of the composition, structural geology, physical properties, dynamics, and History of the Earth of Earth materials, and the processes by which they are formed, moved, and changed....
     and many other earth sciences and natural sciences.
  • Contemporary soils carry imprints of pedogenic processes that were active in the past, although in many cases these imprints are difficult to observe or quantify. Thus, knowledge of paleoecology
    Paleoecology

    Paleoecology uses data from fossils and subfossils to reconstruct the ecosystems of the past. It includes the study of fossil organisms and their bromalites and other trace fossils in terms of their Biological life cycle, their living interactions, their natural environment, their manner of death and burial....
    , palaeogeography
    Palaeogeography

    Palaeogeography is the study of what the geography was in times past. It is most often used about the physical landscape, although nothing excludes that the word also be used about the human or cultural environment....
    , glacial geology and paleoclimatology
    Paleoclimatology

    Paleoclimatology is the study of climate change taken on the scale of the entire history of Earth. It uses records from ice sheets, tree rings, sediment, and rock s to determine the past state of the climate system on Earth....
     is important for the recognition and understanding of soil genesis and constitute a basis for predicting the future soil changes.
  • Five major, external factors of soil formation (climate
    Climate

    Climate encompasses the temperatures, humidity, atmospheric pressure, winds, rainfall, atmospheric particle count and numerous other Meteorology elements in a given region over long periods of time, as opposed to the term weather, which refers to current activity of these same elements....
    , organisms
    Soil life

    Soil life or soil biota is a collective term for all the organisms living within the soil....
    , relief
    Topography

    Topography is the study of Earth's surface shape and features or those ofplanets, Natural satellite, and asteroids. It is also the description of such surface shapes and features ....
    , parent material
    Parent material

    Parent material, in soil science, means the underlying geological material in which soil horizons form. Soils typically get a great deal of structure and minerals from their parent material....
     and time
    Geologic time scale

    File:Geologic clock.jpgThe geologic time scale is a chronology schema relating stratigraphy to time that is used by geologys and other earth sciences scientists to describe the timing and relationships between events that have occurred during the history of the Earth....
    ), and several smaller, less identifiable ones, drive pedogenic processes and create soil patterns.
  • Characteristics of soils and soil landscapes, e.g., the number, sizes, shapes and arrangements of soil bodies, each of which is characterized on the basis of soil horizons, degree of internal homogeneity, slope
    Slope

    Slope is used to describe the steepness, incline, gradient, or grade of a line . A higher slope value indicates a steeper incline. The slope is defined as the ratio of the "rise" divided by the "run" between two points on a line, or in other words, the ratio of the altitude change to the horizontal distance between any two point...
    , aspect
    Aspect

    Aspect may be:*Aspect , a feature that is linked to many parts of a program, but which is not necessarily the primary function of the program...
    , landscape position, age and other properties and relationships, can be observed and measured.
  • Distinctive bioclimatic regimes or combinations of pedogenic processes produce distinctive soils. Thus, distinctive, observable morphological features
    Soil morphology

    Soil morphology is the field observable attributes of the soil within the various soil horizons and the description of the kind and arrangement of the horizons....
    , e.g., illuvial clay accumulation in B horizons, are produced by certain combinations of pedogenic processes operative over varying periods of time.
  • Pedogenic
    Pedogenesis

    Pedogenesis or soil evolution is the process by which soil is created. It is the major topic of the science of pedology , whose other aspects include the soil morphology, soil classification of soils, and their distribution in nature, present and past ....
     (soil-forming) processes act to both create and destroy order (anisotropy
    Anisotropy

    Anisotropy is the property of being directionally dependent, as opposed to isotropy, which means homogeneity in all directions. It can be defined as a difference in a physical property for some material when measured along different axes....
    ) within soils; these processes can proceed simultaneously. The resulting soil profile reflects the balance of these processes, present and past.
  • The geological Principle of Uniformitarianism
    Uniformitarianism (science)

    Uniformitarianism, in the philosophy of science, assumes that the natural processes that operated in the past are the same as those that can be observed operating in the present....
     applies to soils, i.e., pedogenic processes active in soils today have been operating for long periods of time, back to the time of appearance of organisms on the land surface. These processes do, however, have varying degrees of expression and intensity over space and time.
  • A succession of different soils may have developed, eroded and/or regressed
    Soils retrogression and degradation

    Soils retrogression and degradation in the French school of Pedology are two regressive evolution processes associated with the loss of equilibrium of a stable soil....
     at any particular site, as soil genetic factors and site factors, e.g., vegetation
    Vegetation

    refers to the flora system of a specific region....
    , sedimentation
    Sedimentation

    Sedimentation describes the motion of molecules in solutions or particle s in suspension in response to an external force such as gravitation, centrifugal force or electromagnetism....
    , geomorphology
    Geomorphology

    Geomorphology is the scientific study of landforms and the processes that shape them. Geomorphologists seek to understand why landscapes look the way they do: to understand landform history and dynamics, and predict future changes through a combination of field observation, physical experiment, and numerical mathematical model....
    , change.
  • There are very few old soils (in a geological sense) because they can be destroyed or buried by geological events, or modified by shifts in climate by virtue of their vulnerable position at the surface of the earth. Little of the soil continuum dates back beyond the Tertiary
    Tertiary

    The Tertiary is a a term for a Geologic time scale#Terminology 65 million to 1.8 million years ago. The Tertiary covered the time span between the superseded Secondary period and an out-of-date definition of the Neogene#Controversy....
     period and most soils and land surfaces are no older than the Pleistocene
    Pleistocene

    The Pleistocene is the epoch from 1.8 million to 10,000 years Before Present covering the world's recent period of repeated glaciations. The name pleistocene is derived from the Greek and ....
     Epoch. However, preserved/lithified soils (paleosols) are an almost ubiqutious feature in terrestrial (land-based) environments throughout most of geologic time. Since they record evidence of ancient climate change, they present immense utility in understanding climate evolution throughout geologic history.
  • Knowledge and understanding of the genesis of a soil is important in its classification
    Soil classification

    Soil classification deals with the systematic categorization of soils based on distinguishing characteristics as well as criteria that dictate choices in use....
     and mapping.
  • Soil classification systems cannot be based entirely on perceptions of genesis, however, because genetic processes are seldom observed and because pedogenic processes change over time.
  • Knowledge of soil genesis is imperative and basic to soil use and management. Human influence on, or adjustment to, the factors and processes of soil formation can be best controlled and planned using knowledge about soil genesis.
  • Soils are natural clay factories (clay
    Clay

    Clay is a naturally occurring material composed primarily of fine-grained minerals, which show plasticity through a variable range of water content, and which can be hardened when dried and/or fired....
     includes both clay mineral structures and particles less than 2 µm in diameter). Shale
    Shale

    Shale is a fine-grained sedimentary rock whose original constituents were clay minerals or muds. It is characterized by thin laminae breaking with an irregular curving fracture, often splintery and usually parallel to the often-indistinguishable bedding plane....
    s worldwide are, to a considerable extent, simply soil clays that have been formed in the pedosphere
    Pedosphere

    The pedosphere is the outermost layer of the Earth that is composed of soil and subject to pedogenesis. It exists at the interface of the lithosphere, Earth's atmosphere, hydrosphere and biosphere....
     and eroded and deposited in the ocean basins, to become lithified at a later date.

Famous pedologists

  • Olivier de Serres
    Olivier de Serres

    Olivier de Serres was a French author and List of soil scientists whose Th??tre d'Agriculture was the text book of French agriculture in the 1600s....
  • Bernard Palissy
    Bernard Palissy

    Bernard Palissy was a France pottery and craftsman, famous for having struggled for 16 years to imitate Chinese porcelain....
  • Vasily V. Dokuchaev
    Vasily V. Dokuchaev

    Vasily Vasili'evich Dokuchaev was a Russian geographer who is credited with laying the foundations of soil science....
  • Eugene W. Hilgard
    Eugene W. Hilgard

    Eugene Woldemar Hilgard was a Germany-United States expert on pedology . An authority on soil chemistry and reclamation of Alkali#Alkaline soil, he is considered the father of modern soil science in the USA....
  • Hans Jenny
    Hans Jenny (pedologist)

    Hans Jenny was a soil scientist and expert on pedology , particularly the processes of soil formation....
  • Charles E. Kellogg
  • Curtis F. Marbut


See also

  • Agricultural sciences basic topics
  • List of soil topics
    List of soil topics

    *Atriplex *saline seep*salinity in Australia*salting the earth* Atriplex-----*soil amendment* conservation district*Soil Association*soil classification...