Title: Weathering and Soils
1Weathering and Soils
2(No Transcript)
3The Rock Cycle
4The Rock Cycle
5WeatheringBreakdown of Rock near the Surface Due
to Surface Processes
- Chemical Alteration
- Solution Leaching
- Biological Action
- Hydration
- Mechanical
- Impact
- Wedging Frost, Plant Roots, Salt Crystal
Growth, Expansion of Hydrated Minerals
6Never Safe From Weathering
7Weathering Rates
8Differential Weathering and Erosion
9Differential Weathering and Erosion
10Mass-WastingMovement of Large Amounts of
Material Downhill under Gravity
- Creep
- Mudflows
- Slump
- Rockfalls
- Avalanches
11Surface Area and Weathering
12Surface-Volume Effects
13Spheroidal Weathering
14Spheroidal Weathering and Exfoliation
15Spheroidal Weathering
16Joints and Spheroidal Weathering
17What Determines Soil Type
- Climate
- Vegetation
- Drainage
- Time
- Parent Material
- Residual - Transported
- Least Important Factor for Mature Soils
18Soil Formation
- Young Soils
- Strongest Influence Is Parent Material
- Mature Soils
- Strongest Influences Climate, Vegetation,
Drainage
19Soil Formation Processes
- Leaching from Surface
- K, Mg, Na
- Ca
- Si
- Al, Fe
- Accumulation beneath Surface
- Al, Fe in Humid Climates
- Ca in Arid Climates
20Soil Horizons and Profiles
- Soil Horizons
- Layers in Soil
- Not Deposited, but Zones of Chemical Action
- Soil Profile
- Suite of Layers at a Given Locality
21Principal Soil Horizons
- O - Organic (Humus) Often Absent
- A Leaching
- K, Mg, Na, Clay Removed
- E - Bleached Zone - Present Only in Certain Soils
- B Accumulation
- Absent in Young Soils
- Distinct in Old Soils
- Al, Fe, Clay (Moist)
- Si, Ca (Arid)
- C - Parent Material
22Limits of Soil Formation
- Balance Between
- Downward Lowering of Surface
- Downward Migration of Horizons
- If erosion rapid or soil evolution slow, soils
may never mature beyond a certain point. - Extremely ancient soils may have lost everything
movable
23Soil Classification
- This may be the most difficult classification
problem in science because of the many factors
involved. - Varied Bases for Classification
- Parent Material
- Special Constituent Materials
- Maturity
- Structure
- Climate Vegetation
- Multiple Objectives
- Scientific
- Genesis Evolution
- Agricultural
- Fertility
- Most Effective Use
- Engineering
- Slope Stability
- Expansion and Shrinkage
- Stability of Excavations
24"The 7th Approximation"
- U.S. Soil Conservation Service
- 12 Soil Orders
25"The 7th Approximation"
Degree of Weathering and B Horizon Development Degree of Weathering and B Horizon Development Degree of Weathering and B Horizon Development Degree of Weathering and B Horizon Development Degree of Weathering and B Horizon Development Degree of Weathering and B Horizon Development
Little Slight Slight Moderate Large Extreme
Entisols Aridisols Aridisols
Inceptisols Inceptisols Alfisols
Spodosols Ultisols
Mollisols Oxisols
Soils Defined by Special Constituent Materials Soils Defined by Special Constituent Materials Soils Defined by Special Constituent Materials Soils Defined by Special Constituent Materials Soils Defined by Special Constituent Materials Soils Defined by Special Constituent Materials
Andisols Andisols Volcanic Ash Volcanic Ash Volcanic Ash Volcanic Ash
Histosols Histosols Peat, Organic Matter Peat, Organic Matter Peat, Organic Matter Peat, Organic Matter
Vertisols Vertisols Self-Mixing Clay Soils Self-Mixing Clay Soils Self-Mixing Clay Soils Self-Mixing Clay Soils
Gelisols Gelisols Soils on Permafrost Soils on Permafrost Soils on Permafrost Soils on Permafrost
26Soils of the U.S.
27Typical Soil Profile (Spodosol)
28Aridisol, Kuwait
29UltisolsAlabamaTennessee
30Oxisol, California (a Paleosol)
31Paleosol, Scotland