Title: SOIL: Make it Work for You!
1SOIL Make it Work for You!
We Study Soil Because Its A(n)
Great integrator all parts of ecosystem
Snapshot of geologic, climatic, biological, and
human history
Medium of crop production
Producer and absorber of gases
Waste decomposer
Medium for plant growth
Source material for construction, medicine, art,
etc.
Home to organisms (plants, animals and others)
Filter of water and wastes
Essential natural resource
2SOIL Make it Work for You!
Soil Forming Factors
3SOIL Make it Work for You!
What is Soil?
- Each discipline defines soil in a different way,
depending on how soil affects it. - In an engineering sense, soil is the relatively
loose agglomerate of mineral and organic
materials and sediments found above the
bedrock. - R.D. Holtz and W.D. Kovacs (1981)
4SOIL Make it Work for You!
- Physical Characteristics
- Soil Texture, Consistency, Structure
- Soil Compaction (Bulk Density)
- Soil Moisture
- Nutrient Characteristics (Soil Chemistry)
- Chemical bonding
- pH
- Cation Exchange Capacity (CEC)
- Nutrient Availability
5SOIL Make it Work for You!
Physical Characteristics of Soil
- Texture the mineral components
- Consistency Structure How the mineral
components are put together - Bulk Density
- Soil Moisture
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- Soil Texture
- The way the soil feels is called the soil
texture. - Soil texture depends on the amount of each size
of mineral particles in the soil. - Sand, silt, and clay are names that describe the
size of individual mineral particles in the soil. - Sand are the largest particles and they fell
gritty - Silt are medium sized, and they feel soft, silky
or floury - Clay are the smallest sized particles, and they
feel sticky
7SOIL Make it Work for You!
Soil Texture Relative Size Comparison of Soil
Particles
frisbee
dime
Clay (feels sticky)
Silt (feels floury)
(lt 0.002 mm, USDA) (lt 0.002 mm, ISSS)
(0.05 - 0.002 mm, USDA) (0.02 - 0.002 mm, ISSS)
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Soil Texture Triangle
Triangle Key S sand or sandy Si silt or
silty C clay L loam or loamy
9SOIL Make it Work for You!
Effects of Soil Texture
- Soils are more cohesive when they have more fine
particles (Clays). - Soils are more loose when the have more coarse
particles (Sand). - Different combinations of coarse and fine
contents produce different soil textures. - A loam is a mixture of sand, silt and clay
sandy clay loam is best in landscapes. - Many other inclusions, such as cobbles, boulders.
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- Soil Consistency
- Describes the general organization of the soil.
- Hold a moist sample between the thumb and
forefinger, and gently squeeze it until it falls
apart. - The soil is classified by the following
categories - Loose You have trouble picking out a single
sample and the structure falls apart before you
handle it. - Friable The sample breaks with a small amount
of pressure. - Firm The sample breaks when you apply a good
amount of pressure and dents your fingers before
it breaks. - Extremely Firm The sample can't be crushed with
your fingers (you need a hammer!).
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Soil Consistence
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Soil Structure the shape that the soil takes
based on its physical and chemical properties.
Possible choices of soil structure are
- With Structure
- Granular
- Blocky
- Platy
- Prismatic
- Columnar
- Without Structure
- Single Grained
- Massive
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Soil Structure
- Without Structure
- Single Grained
- beach sand
- Massive
- solid mass with no shape
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Soil Structure with Structure
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Soil Structure without Structure
Single Grained
Massive
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Bulk Density a measure of soil compaction
Sample is made of Solids and Pore Spaces
1 cm. (so, there is 1 cubic centimeter of soil)
1.33 gms.
To calculate Bulk Density
1.33
Volume 1 cm3
Bulk Density
1
Weight 1.33 gms
Bulk Density
1.33 gms / cm3
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Bulk Density Compaction Zones
Depth
Bulk Density (grams / cm3
0 inches
1.43
Plow Layer
1.90
7 inches
1.87
Compacted Zone
8 inches
9 inches
1.84
10 inches
1.80
Uncompacted subsoil
1.60
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Basic Soil Components
Soil Particles Mineral and Organic
Pore Spaces location of air and water
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- Soil Moisture some terms and concepts
- Field Capacity water that remains in soil
beyond the effects of gravity. - Permanent Wilting Percentage amount of water
after the permanent wilting point is reached. - Available Water amount of water in the soil
between the field capacity and the permanent
wilting percentage.
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Relationship between soil texture and water
availability
4
Inches of Water Per ft. of Soil
Field Capacity
3
Available Water
2
Permanent Wilting Percentage
1
Sand
Sandy Loam
Silt Loam
Clay Loam
Clay
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Soil at Different Moisture Levels
At Saturation
At Available Water
Water on soil particle surface
Pore Spaces are filled with water
Pore Space
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Soil at Different Moisture Levels
At Permanent Wilt
Compacted
No water remains attached to soil particles
Pore spaces are collapsed
23Compacted Zone
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Impermeable Layer
24Sand Over Clay
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Impermeable Layer
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Clay Over Sand
Perched Water Table
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Soil Sandwiches
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Soil Salads
28Summary of Water Movement
SOIL Make it Work for You!
- Rate depends on
- pore space (structure) and consitence
- particle sizes (texture) and particle size
distribution. - Changes in bulk density
- changes water movement (e.g. compaction).
- may result in perched water tables through
creating an impermeable layer.
29Surface Drainage (Run-Off)
SOIL Make it Work for You!
- Severity of slopes
- Angle and length of slopes
- Soil or surface type
- Presence or absence of vegetation
- Total surface area of drainage basin
- Must include structural surface area
- Structures modify soil saturation, contact areas,
and volume contact/unit area
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Controlling Surface Drainage
- Contoured beds and or terracing
- Re-vegetation mats
- Organic vs. synthetics
- Run strips parallel to slope
- Soil modifications
- Replace high bulk density soils
- Incorporate OM or aggregates
- Break up soil surface crusts
- Divert run-off from adjacent sites
- Stabilize slopes with synthetic materials,
mulches or vegetation - Break up straight line flows, slows velocity
- Construct sediment fences
- Line drainage channels with coarse aggregates
31Altering Subsurface Drainage
SOIL Make it Work for You!
- Deep plowing (sub-soiling) can damage tree roots
where landscape is established, utilities,
impractical for small sites - Avoid abrupt changes in soil type
- Incorporate OM or large quantities of
aggregates - Huge variety of drains
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- Large Subsurface Drains
- Concrete pipes
- Usually for heavy traffic or very large drains
- High handling and transportation costs
- Large diameter - 12 to 24 diameter metal
culverts - Preferred under vehicular traffic
- Damaged ends hinder linking
- Expensive
- Smaller Subsurface Drains
- Ceramic tiles, out moded
- Corrugated plastic pipe
- Cheap, light, flexible
- Perforated - areas of collection of release
- Non-perforated - transport areas
- Avoid clods contacting during installation
- Cover on 3 to 4 sides with 3 to 4 of aggregates
- Cover with back-fill, preferably 12
- Topsoil in non-roads, road bed material in
traffic areas
33French Drains
SOIL Make it Work for You!
- Old-fashioned, but very effective
- Numerous variations
- With or without pipes
- Covered or exposed
- Often connected to the surface with water
permeable material - Essentially a trench filled with aggregates
- Always slope to a lower elevation!
- Very useful for draining contained planting sites
34SOIL Make it Work for You!
Soil Horizons
- Horizon A topsoil
- Specified by texture, OM content, available
nutrients and drainage characteristics. - Critical to landscape success.
- Should be removed prior to construction and stock
piled on site - Incorporate 1/3 into sub-soils after construction
to create smoother transition zone - Sharp transition between topsoil and subsoil
creates perched water tables.
- Horizon B transition zone
- Constitutes much of the exposed soil in areas
where construction has occurred and in some
formerly cultivated portions of Ohio - Horizon C true subsoil
- Little or no soil development.
- Often contains accumulated soluble salts, lime,
etc. beneath cultivated areas.
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Characterization and Sampling Options
Soil Pit
Exposed Profile (road cut)
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Soil Chemistry
- Chemical bonding
- pH
- Nutrient Availability
- Cation Exchange Capacity (CEC)
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- What is chemistry?
- Elements the simplest kind of matter. They
cannot be broken down into anything simpler. - Elements can exist alone. Nitrogen (N),
Phosphorus (P), Potassium (K), Oxygen (O), are
elements and they can be made to exist alone, but
in nature they seldom do. - Elements tend to combine with each other. These
are called compounds. When they combine, its
called a chemical reaction.
38SOIL Make it Work for You!
- What is chemistry?
- Chemistry is the study of the how and why
elements combine, and break apart, through
chemical reactions. - Soil Chemistry is simply studying how and why
compounds are formed and broken apart in the
soil, and how these chemical reactions affect
plants.
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Chemistry Made Simple The Atom
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The Electron negative charge
The Nucleus positive charge
Hydrogen
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Chemistry Made Simple The Atom
Hydrogen
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A Water Molecule
H2O
Hydrogen
Hydrogen
Oxygen
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- What happens when an atom has too many electrons?
- It has a negative charge ( - )
- These atoms are called anions
- What happens when an atom doesnt have enough
electrons? - It has a positive charge ()
- These atoms are called cations
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- What happens when an anion meets a cation?
- Anions have a negative charge (-)
- Cations have a positive charge ()
- When they meet, they combine to become a
molecule, the simplest compound - NaCl (sodium chloride salt).
Chlorine Cl-
Sodium Na
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Common soil cations and anions, their chemical
symbols and ionic forms
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The Chemistry of Clay
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Clay Particle
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Clay particles carry negative charges
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With Magnets
In Soil
Unlikes Attract
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Likes Repel
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The Strange Properties of Water
- Water ionizes it falls apart into ions.
- H2O H OH-
- Called the self ionization of water.
- Only a small amount.
48SOIL Make it Work for You!
What is pH?
- Its simply a measure of the relative amount of
H ions - In the soil, it is driven by the ionization of
water H2O H OH- - We us pH to measure the acidity or the alkalinity
(basicity) of a solution (a soil solution)
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50Possible pH Ranges Under Natural Soil Conditions
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Clay and organic particles have a negative charge
Soil reactions in neutral to high (alkaline) pH
conditions
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K
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Clay Particle
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Al3
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Clay and organic particles have a negative charge
Soil reactions in low (acid) pH conditions
53SOIL Make it Work for You!
Physical and Chemical Characteristics of Soil
what does it all mean to you?
- Soil Texture and physical nature of the soil
- Water availability
- soil texture
- bulk density
- Soil Chemistry
- Charged elements / molecules soil particles
- pH and nutrients