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Glossary
Glossary of soil terms
Some important terms that define soil include:
aeolian
- matter transported by wind
aerobic soils
- soils where oxygen is available, found in well-drained soils
alluvial
- matter transported by water
anaerobic soils
- oxygen deficient soil, generally found in conditions where soil is waterlogged or poorly drained, and water has replace soil air
colluvial
- refers to material transported by gravity
fertility
- capacity of soil to provide nutrients for plant growth. Includes:
chemical -supply of nutrients
biological - population of micro-orgs and organic matter being broken down by them
physical -soil structure neccessary for water and nutrient storage
horizon
- layers of soil, with properties distinct from those above and/or below
massive
- lack of horizons. i.e. soil as a solid mass
parent material
- can include bedrock, alluvium or wind blown deposits
permeability
- governs the rate at which water moves through a soil. Sands and gravels have very high permeability, heavy clays very low.
porosity
- degree to which the soil has pores or cavities, i.e. % of soil unoccupied by solid particles. (There can be small or large pores, many or few.)
structure
- How the particles group together to form 'peds'. For example, a beach soil does not cling at all and so is structureless, while in a massive earth the particles join in a large featureless mass. Most soils are somewhere between the two. An indicator of soils capacity to allow air and water into and out of the soil profile.
texture
- indicates size of soil particles, from clay which is the smallest up to sand and then gravel. Can indicate water holding capacity, ploughability and fertility.
water-holding capacity
- the amount of water held by soil once excess has drained away. Important for plant growth.