Human Changes Soil Structure Ce501
Human Changes Soil Structure Ce501
Human Changes Soil Structure Ce501
TEZPUR UNIVERSITY
POPULATION GROW:
The global human population has grown from approximately 600 million at the beginning of the
eighteenth century to close to 7.6 billion today. human activities are now at such a scale as to
rival forces of nature in their influence on soil changes. Any activity that exposes soil to wind and
rain can lead to soil loss. Farming, construction and development, and mining are among the main
activities that impact soil resources.
FOREST REMOVAL:
In a normal forest ecosystem, the forest will regenerate given enough time. However, in
some climates and with particular land clearing, the trees will never grow back and the
ecosystem is changed forever. In those cases, land clearing has numerous impacts
resulting from the loss of the trees, the changed undergrowth, and the soil subsystem.
The obvious result of the loss of the trees is the greater sunlight reaching the soil and the
lack of cover from wind and rain. The mechanical action of the wind and rain directly
increase the erosion. The secondary effect of the increased exposure to the Sun is the
change to the soil structure and soil moisture regime. Increased exposure will create
greater dessication (drying) and organic matter will be destroyed (through oxidation).
This will reduce the binding power of the soil.
MINING:
Some methods of mining cause soil loss. For example, the digging of strip mines and open-pit
mines involves the removal of plants and soil from the surface of the ground. In mining
operations that expose sulfide minerals, the increased chemical weathering causes a type of
pollution known as acid drainage. Abandoned mines can fill with rainwater. Sulfide minerals
react with the air and the water to produce sulfuric acid. Then the acid water drains from the
mines, polluting the soil in surrounding areas.
SOIL CONSERVATION:
Soil conservation is very important, because soil can be difficult or impossible to replace once it
has been lost. Soil takes a very long time to form. A soil with well-developed horizons may take
hundreds of thousands of years to form! Most soil conservation methods are designed to hold
soil in place and keep it fertile. Below are descriptions of a few of the many soil conservation
methods that are used by farmers around the world.
REFFERENCE:
1.
https://www.classzone.com/science_book/mls_grade7_FL/248_252.pdf
2. https://www.quora.com/How-does-deforestation-impact-soil-erosion
3. WILLARD H. CARMEAN, Athens Forest Research Center, Central States Forest Experiment Station,
Athens, Ohio,THE STRUCTURE OF FOREST SOILS
https://kb.osu.edu/bitstream/handle/1811/4444/V57N03_165.pdf
4. Mitchell, J.K. and Soga, K. Fundamentals of soil behavior, 3 rd ED. , john Wiley & sons, New Jersey,
USA,2005.
5. Yong, R.N., and Warkentin. B.P., Soil Properties and Behaviour, Elsevier, Amsterdam,
the Netherlands, 1975.