Title: Soils and Geologic Time
1Soils and Geologic Time
- soil f (time, )
- Soil formation can be a slow process
- Not always observable on human time scale
- Need appreciation of geologic time scale
2Soil Age and Geomorphic Surfaces
- Soil age is dictated by age of geomorphic
surface - - Erosional
- Constructional
- Geological maps
- Soil f (age of geomorphic surface, )
3On-Going Erosional Geomorphic Surfaces Age
Residence Time soil (kg or cm)/soil input or
loss (kg or cm) soil / soil production rate
4FROG HOLLOW, AUSTRALIA
5EROSIONAL GEOMORPHIC SURFACES Soil Thickness
Hillslope Curvature
6SOME GEOMORPHIC SURFACES NO LONGER EXPERIENCE
SIGNIFICANT EROSION OR DEPOSTION Soil Age
Elapsed Time Since Erosion/Deposition Stopped
Terrace ages range from 102 to gt 1.5 Ma
7Relative Geological Time
- One of great intellectual developments of last
millenium - 4 Eras of time related to major biological events
or changes - - Precambrian
- Neary 4 billion years of time
- Evolution of bacteria and simple forms of life
that still dominate our planet - Paleozoic
- Cambrian explosion of life
- Evolution of land plants
- Ended with large extinction
- Mesozoic
- Age of dinasaurs
- Ended with extinction
- Cenozoic
- Age of mammals
- Tertiary vs. Quaternary
- Now experiencing great extinction event
8Geomophic Surfaces and Soil Age
- Earths surface is very dynamic (on geological
time scale) - Much, or most, of earths surface has been
altered inQuaternary period, and much of earth
surface is Holocene in age - Glaciation
- Loess deposition
- Fluvial deposition
- Erosion
- Pedology is therefore greatly concerned with
Pleistocene and Holocene epochs
9Relative Geological Time Scale
10The Significance of Humans in Relative Time
11Numerical Geological Time
- Truly developed in 20th century with advances in
chemistry and the devolopment of radioactive
clocks - Variety of clocks continues to grow and is now
especially useful in dating geomorphic surfaces
12Soils and the Recognition of the Immensity of
Geological Time
- Jame Hutton and his paradox of the soil
13Huttons Paradox
- Background of Hutton
- Viewed as originator of modern geology
- Yet he a unlikely candidate conventional
Christian, gentleman farmer - The Paradox
- World is adapted to to the purpose of man, which
must include soils - Hutton realized soil formation requires
destruction of rocks, lowering of land surface,
and ultimate loss of land fertilty - How can a well balanced earth have both soil
and denudation? Hutton recognized that
regenerative forces of uplift and volanism are
required - The slowness of this process, combined with rocks
in every stage of the cycle invked enormous
magnitudes of time
14Geological Unconformity that Contributed to
Huttons Recognition of Geological Time
- Hutton If the succession of worlds is
established in the system of naturethe result of
our present enquiry is that we find no vestige of
a beginning, no prospect of an end.
John Playfair We felt ourselves carried back to
the time when the schitus on which we stodd was
yeat at the bottom of the seaThe mind seemed to
grow giddy by looking so far back into the abyss
of time.