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Physical Properties

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Title: Physical Properties


1
Physical Properties
  • Chapter 3

2
3.1 Introduction
  • Physical properties are those aspects of the soil
    that are related to the soils bulk properties
  • important physical properties of soil
  • texture
  • structure
  • moisture

3
3.2 Soil Texture
  • a term commonly used to designate the
    proportionate distribution of the different sizes
    of mineral particles in a soil
  • does not include any organic matter or mineral
    particles gt 2 mm

4
3.2 Soil Texture
  • According to their size, these mineral particles
    are grouped into separates.
  • A soil separate is a group of mineral particles
    that fits within definite size limits expressed
    as diameter in millimetres
  • Sizes of the separates used in the USDA system of
    nomenclature for soil texture are shown in Table
    3.1

5
3.2 Soil Texture
6
3.2 Soil Texture
  • all mineral particles discussed in this section
    are less than 2 mm
  • an analysis of soil texture must include removal
    of large particles
  • done by sieving
  • analytical procedure by which the percentages of
    the various soil separates are obtained is called
    a mechanical analysis

7
3.2 Soil Texture
  • mineral soils (mainly rock) are a mixture of soil
    separates
  • on the basis of the proportion of these various
    separates that the textural class names of soils
    are determined

8
3.2 Soil Texture
The 12 soil texture classes
9
Example 3.1 72 sand 25 clay 3 silt
10
Exercise 3.1
??? Be consistent
Clay
Loam
Clay Loam
11
Texture Classes
  • The notes explain in detail the differences
    between the twelve texture classes
  • You are required to be able to tell the
    difference between the classes
  • But as it is so boring to read, you can do this
    as study for the exam!
  • So start highlighting!

12
Significance
  • texture is one of the most important soil
    characteristics
  • influences many other properties of great
    significance to land use and management
  • terms used to describe soils based on their
    texture
  • sandy or coarse-textured soils
  • loamy or medium-textured soils
  • clayey or fine textured soils

13
Significance of sandy soils
  • Sandy soils tend to be
  • low in organic matter content
  • Low in native fertility
  • low in ability to retain moisture and nutrients
  • low in cation exchange and buffer capacities
  • rapidly permeable

14
Significance of sandy soils
  • Consequences of sandy soils
  • thick, upland deposits of such soil materials are
    often quite droughty
  • need irrigation at times during dry seasons
  • are best adapted to deep-rooted crops (such as
    citrus where temperatures permit)

15
Significance of sandy soils
  • Consequences (continued)
  • have high bulk densities and are well-suited for
    road foundations and building sites
  • total amounts of fertiliser per crop are usually
    quite high
  • require good water management, including more
    frequent irrigations and/or artificial drainage

16
Significance of loamy/clayey soils
  • Loamy and finer soils tend to be
  • more fertile
  • contain more organic matter
  • have higher cation exchange and buffer capacities
  • are better able to retain moisture and nutrients
  • permit less rapid movement of air and water

17
Significance of loamy soils
  • All of this is good up to a point
  • too sticky when wet
  • too hard when dry to cultivate
  • may have shrink-swell characteristics that affect
    their suitability adversely for use as building
    sites and for road construction

18
What is the best soil?
  • "Best for what?"
  • sandy loams soils generally
  • better suited for a wider variety of purposes
  • yield better agricultural yields

19
3.3 Soil Structure
  • individual particles of sand, silt, and clay tend
    to become clustered together in soil
  • clustering into aggregates gives structure to the
    soil
  • eg the granules of soil clinging to dug up grass
    roots

20
3.3 Soil Structure
  • a structural unit is called a ped
  • the surfaces of peds persist through cycles of
    wetting and drying in place
  • clods and fragments are different to peds
  • they form as a consequence of factors other than
    soil formation, eg digging
  • some soils lack structure and are referred to as
    structureless or massive

21
3.3 Soil Structure
  • soils structure described by
  • shape
  • size
  • grade
  • of the units
  • special set of terms used for classification (as
    with texture)

22
Shape
  • The following terms describe the basic shapes and
    related arrangements
  • platy
  • prismatic
  • columnar
  • blocky
  • granular

23
Size
  • Five classes are employed
  • very fine
  • fine
  • medium
  • coarse
  • very coarse
  • size limit classes vary from one shape to another
    (see Table 3.1)

24
Grade
  • describes the distinctness of units
  • criteria are
  • the ease of separation into discrete units
  • the proportion of units that hold together when
    handled
  • classes used
  • weak - the units are barely observable in place
  • moderate - the units are well formed and evident
    in undisturbed soil
  • strong - the units are distinct in undisturbed
    soil

25
How does all of this fit?
  • The three terms for soil structure are combined
    in the order (1) grade, (2) size, (3) shape.
  • Example
  • strong fine granular
  • used to describe a soil that separates almost
    entirely into discrete units that are
  • loosely packed
  • mostly between 1 and 2 mm in diameter
  • roughly spherical

26
3.4 Soil Porosity
  • water is only able to travel through soil because
    of the spaces between particles pores
  • pore size and distribution important in
    determining the movement of water in soil
  • large pores can conduct more water, more rapidly
    than small pores

27
3.4 Soil Porosity
  • Suction is a measure of the energy required to
    remove water from a given pore
  • It is easier to remove water from a large pore
    than from a fine pore

28
Exercises 3.3
  • density mass value

135 130
1.04
60
0.4
0.6
2.65
29
3.4 Soil Porosity
  • porosity of sandy soils is less than that of
    clayey soils
  • larger particles in sands cannot pack together as
    efficiently as the small ones in clays
  • water will drain very rapidly from large pores,
    such as those found in sands, but very slowly
    from the smaller pores in clays
  • topsoil (the A horizon) has a greater porosity
    than the subsoil (B horizons).
  • Why should this be?
  • less sand in lower horizon

30
3.4 Soil Porosity
  • air molecules are able to move equally well
    through any empty pores, regardless of size
  • if gas encounters a pore filled with water,
    movement is very slow
  • clays, which retain water in the small pores, are
    not well aerated and can suffer oxygen depletion
    to the roots

31
3.4 Soil Porosity
  • an ideal soil has a porosity of around 50,
  • an even division between small and large pores.
  • a balance between water storage and transport,
    and oxygen diffusion

32
3.5 Soil Colour
  • Soil colour is important because it is an
    indirect measure of other important
    characteristics
  • water drainage and aeration
  • organic matter content
  • certain inorganic components
  • measured by a Munsell soil-colour book

33
3.6 Soil Moisture
  • With regards to water, you have probably thought
    that water was either available or unavailable
  • Commonly associated with flood or drought
    mentality
  • But there is so much that you dont know!

34
Exercise 3.4
  • List reasons why the water-soil relationship is
    important
  • storage
  • transportation
  • availability to plants, micro-organisms

35
3.6 Soil Moisture
  • There are three ways that water interacts with
    soil
  • Hygroscopic interaction
  • Capillary rise
  • Gravitational fall
  • first water taken in is hygroscopic, then
    capillary then gravitational

36
Hygroscopic (adhesion) water
  • very tightly bound to the soil particle by
    positive-negative interactions due to the
    polarity of water and the soil compound
  • not available to plants
  • can only be lost by oven drying (gt100C)
  • air dry soils still have this water

37
Capillary (cohesion) water
  • this is adsorbed onto the hygroscopic water
  • can be accessed by plants
  • it is the most important water for plants because
    it does not drain away

38
Drainage (gravitational) water
  • this water occupies the pores between particles
  • will drain away over time through the force of
    gravity
  • always on the move
  • not considered as available water
  • it can top up the capillary water if it has
    become depleted

39
3.6 Soil Moisture
  • saturated soil the large pores are filled with
    gravitational water and not air
  • permanent wilting point (PWP) soil that has
    been depleted of its capillary water
  • field capacity (FC) soil with no gravitational
    water but maximum capillary water
  • difference between FC and PWP is the amount of
    water available to plants
  • varies between soils

40
Figure 3.5
41
3.7 Organic matter
  • an important role in
  • aggregation
  • water-holding capacity
  • infiltration capacity
  • closely related to soil fertility
  • contributes considerably to the cation exchange
    capacity of soils
  • nutrients such as N, S B are almost totally
    derived from organic matter

42
Organic matter
  • typical levels are 0.5-6
  • more than 50C, 5N
  • decomposition of organic matter releases N that
    growing plants can use
  • high release rates result from
  • high soil temperatures
  • good aeration
  • moist soil
  • low clay contents
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