Soil Science 1 - Soil Genesis Ronel Roberto
Soil Science 1 - Soil Genesis Ronel Roberto
Soil Science 1 - Soil Genesis Ronel Roberto
SOIL SCIENCE
SOIL GENESIS, COMPOSITION, AND DEVELOPMENT
B.7.a.b.a. Hydrolysis – Replacement of the basic ions by the hydrogen, with consequent collapse
and disintegration of the structure.
KAlSi3O8 + H+ HAlSi3O8 + K+
B.7.a.b.b. Hydration – association of water molecules or of hydroxyl groups with minerals,
often without actual decomposition or modification of the mineral itself.
CaSO4 (s) + 2H2O (g,l) CaSO4 . 2H2O
B.7.a.b.c. Oxidation – removal of one or more electrons from an ion or an atom.
4FeO(s) + O2(g) + 2H2O (l) 4FeO(OH) (s)
Ferrous ferric goethite
B.7.a.b.d. Carbonation – minerals are replaced by carbonates. Introducing carbon dioxide into
water.
CO2(g) + H2O (l) H2CO3 (aq) H+(aq) + HCO3 (aq)
CLORPT
Figure 15. Difference in the soil profile under grassland versus forest vegetation.
Young soil vs mature soils - not referring to the age of soils in years but by the degree of weathering and
profile development
B.8.e.a. Catenas
- When soils are developed on the same parent material and the soils only differ on the basis of
drainage due to variations in relief
B.8.e.b. Chronosequence
- A sequence of related soils that differ in certain properties primarily as a result of time as a
soil-forming process
B.8.e.c. Lithosequence
- A group of related soils that differ as a result of parent material
B.8.e.d. Climosequence
- A sequence of soils that differ as a result of changes in climatic regimes (temperature and
precipitation)
B.8.e.e. Biosequence
- A group of related soils that differ primarily due to variation in kinds and numbers of plants
and soil organisms