Module 3 Soil
Module 3 Soil
Module 3 Soil
Module 3
Soil
Semester III, 2023 - 24
B. Sc. - M. Sc. FORENSIC SCIENCE (5 YEAR INTEGRATED)
There are many definitions for the term soil; however, for forensic
purposes, soil may be thought of as any disintegrated material,
natural and/or artificial, that lies on or near the earth’s surface.
Therefore, forensic examination of soil is not only concerned with the
analysis of naturally occurring rocks, minerals, vegetation, and animal
matter; it also encompasses the detection of such manufactured
objects as glass, paint chips, asphalt, brick fragments, and cinders,
whose presence may impart soil with characteristics that make it
unique to a particular location.
When this material is collected accidentally or deliberately in a
manner that associates it with a crime under investigation, it becomes
valuable physical evidence.
Soil profile:
B - horizon or subsoil: It is the subsurface horizon, present just
below the topsoil and above the bedrock. It is comparatively harder
and more compact than topsoil. It contains less humus, soluble
minerals, and organic matter. It is a site of deposition of certain
minerals and metal salts such as iron oxide.
This layer holds more water than the topsoil and is lighter brown due
to the presence of clay soil.
C - horizon: This layer is devoid of any organic matter and is made
up of broken bedrock. This layer is also known as saprolite. The
geological material present in this zone is cemented.
R - horizon: It is a compacted and cemented layer. Different types
of rocks such as granite, basalt and limestone are found here.
Formation of soil:
Physical weathering: Weathering is the mechanical or chemical
process by which rocks are broken down, into smaller pieces.as rocks
are broken down, they mix with organic material, which are those
materials that originate from living organisms.
Biological weathering: It takes place as a result of activities of living
organisms. It can be combined with chemical processes like
chemosynthesis of bacteria.
Chemical weathering: result of chemical interaction between water
and atmospheric gases and the bed rock of the region, like oxidation
reaction with 02 and hydrolysis with H2 O and acid action with acid.
Sandy soil: Sandy soils are characterized by less than 18% clay and
more than 68% sand in the first 100 cm of the solum (solum: the
altered layer of soil above the parent material that includes the A and
B horizons). Sandy soils are often considered as soils with physical
properties easy to define: weak structure or no structure, poor water
retention properties, high permeability, highly sensitivity to
compaction with many adverse consequences. Sandy soils has large
particles with large spaces between them. Since sandy soils do not
hold, not suitable for plants.
Silt soil: Silt Soil is a light and moisture retentive soil type with a
high fertility rating.
As silt soils compromise of medium sized particles they are well
drained and hold moisture well.
As the particles are fine, they can be easily compacted and are prone
to washing away with rain.
By adding organic matter, the silt particles can be bound into more
stable clumps.
Peat soil: Peat soil is high in organic matter and retains a large
amount of moisture.
This type of soil is very rarely found in a garden and often imported
into a garden to provide an optimum soil base for planting.
Variations in soil:
The ultimate forensic value of soil evidence depends on its uniqueness
at the crime scene. If, for example, soil composition is
indistinguishable for miles surrounding the location of a crime,
associating soil found on the suspect with that particular site will
have limited value.
Significant conclusions that link a suspect with a particular location
through a soil comparison may be made when variations in soil
composition occur every 10 to 100 yards from the crime site.
However, even when such variations do exist, the forensic geologist
usually cannot individualize soil to any one location unless it contains
an unusual combination of rare minerals, rocks, or artificial debris.
Geographical Indicator:
Soil content: The basic components of soil are minerals, organic matter,
water and air. The typical soil consists of approximately 45% mineral, 5%
organic matter, 20-30% water, and 20-30% air. These percentages are only
generalizations at best. The variation in soil content can represent the
geographical feature.
Soil particle size: Particle size Distribution represents the percentage of soil
particles of different size ranges. It is an important property of soils that can
be used in a wide range of applications. Coarse-Grained Soil
Gravel: 4.75mm to 80mm
Sand: 0.075mm to 4.75mm
Fine-Grained Soil
Silt: 0.002mm to 0.075mm
Clay: < 0.002mm