Chapter 1 Soil Genesis
Chapter 1 Soil Genesis
services:
Ecosystem services- Products of natural
ecosystems that support and fulfill the
needs of human beings.
• provisioning (providing goods such as water, food,
medicines, lumber, etc.)
• regulating (processes that purify water, decompose
wastes, control pests, or modify atmospheric gases)
• supportive (assisting with nutrient cycling, seed dispersal,
primary biomass production, etc.)
• cultural (providing spiritual uplift, scenic views, and outdoor
recreation opportunities).
Plant obtains from the soil the following:
2. Edaphological approach
It deals with the influence of soils on living
things, particularly plants, including human
use of land for plant growth.
A resource is
a material from which human needs are obtained
outermost layer of the earth
formed by weathering
variable in sizes
decomposed organic materials by the
action of microorganisms
O2
CO2
resistance to scratching;
Moh’s scale
Hardness Mineral Chemical
Composition
1 Talc H2Mg3Si4O12 very soft, easily scratched by
fingernail
2 Gypsum CaSO4H2O soft, just barely scratched by the
fingernail
3 Calcite CaCO3 can be scratched by copper coin
but not with fingernail
4 Flourite CaF2 hard, not scratch by copper coin
but scratched easily by pen knife,
soft iron scratches it
5 Apatite Ca3(PO4)3.F hard, barely scratches glass, can
be scratched by a steel knife blade
6 Orthoclas KAlSiO3O8 very hard, scratches glass and
e steel easily
7 Quartz SiO4 very hard, no common tool for
8 Topaz AlSiO.F2 measurement
9 Corundum Al2O3
10 Diamond C
smooth surface
of breakage
rough surface of
breakage
color of finely
powdered minerals
reflection of ordinary light
Plagioclase feldspars
Albite (NaAlSi3O8)
Anorthite (CaAl2Si2O8)
hardness of 6.0 (Moh’s scale)
density of 2.63 g/cm3
Micas complex K aluminosilicates
Muscovite - H2KAl3(SiO4)3 white
mica
Biotite - K(Mg,Fe)3(AlSi3O10)(OH,F)2
black mica
Source of nutrients
Source of silicate clays
Amphibole-pyroxene group
silicates of iron, calcium and magnesium
Hornblende - Ca2Al2Mg2Fe3Si6O22(OH)2
Augite - Ca2(Al,Fe)4(Mg,Fe)4Si6O24
dull green pyroxene
with hardness of 5.0 to 6.0
with distinct cleavage
Apatite calcium phosphate minerals
Ca
Ca1010(PO
CO3(PO
4)6 4)6 ⇨ Carbonatoapatite
Ca10SO4(PO4)6 ⇨ Sulfatoapatite
Ca10(OH)2(PO4)6 ⇨ Hydroxyapatite
Ca10(Cl)2(PO4)6 ⇨ Chloroapatite
Ca10(F)2(PO4)6 ⇨ Fluoroapatite
primary mineral-carrier of P
with hardness of 5.0
Carbonate group carbonates of Ca & Mg
Calcite - CaCO3
Dolomite - CaMg(CO3)2
source of Ca, Mg
source of lime
Least
Resistant
Iron group oxides of Fe in several
states of hydration
Hematite - Fe2O3
Limonite - 2Fe2O3.3H2O
imparts red color to soils
largely found in highly weathered soils
in old/infertile soils
in acidic soils
Aluminum group oxides of Al in
several states of hydration
Corundum - Al2O3
Hardness of 9
Boehmite - AlOOH
Gibbsite - Al(OH)3
also largely found in highly weathered
soils
in old/infertile soils
in acidic soils
Gypsum CaSO4.2H2O
Hardness of 2.0
source of Ca and S
used as retarder in
cement
Clay group hydrated aluminosilicates
come from micas and feldspars
Kaolin group - Al4Si4O10(OH)8
kaolinite, dickite, nacrite, anauxite
<50% SiO2
50-65% SiO2
are formed at the earth's surface as a
result of the partial melting of rocks
within the mantle and crust
are formed from magma that cools and
solidifies within the earth
rocks formed through lithification
a) the kind of vegetation gives rise to soil bodies with varying soil
characteristics.
b) cation cycling by trees- ie. Conifers allow more of the base forming
cations to be loss through leaching thus more acid soil is developed.
A physical and chemical
disintegration and decomposition of rocks and
minerals to produce the earth’s crust including
the soil
Decrease in size of
rocks
Change in chemical
composition
due to external agents :
water, plant roots, ice
due to temperature
fluctuations, the rocks chemical
compositions alternately expand and
contract causing differential stresses
Exfoliation - peeling away of rock surface from the
parent mass
3. Abrasion by wind, water, or ice- water when
loaded with sediments has tremendous cutting power.
The rounding of riverbed rocks and beach sand
grains is further evidence of abrasion. On the other
hand, rounded rock formation in arid regions
Biological weathering- roots of plants enter
cracks in rock and pry them apart.
Burrowing animals may also help in
disintegrating rocks somewhat.
KAlSi3O8 + H2O KOH + HAlSi3O8
K orthoclase Clay precursor
K+ + OH-
5Fe2O3 + 9H2O Fe10O15.9H2O
Hematite Ferrihydrite
surface layer
eluviation layer
sub-surface layer or subsoil
parent material
solid bedrock
Suffixes Distinction
a sapric or totally decomposed
b buried soil
c accumulation of concretory form
e hemic or ½ decomposed
g mottling
h accumulation of OM
i fibric or less 1/3 decomposed
j Jarosite
k accumulation of calcium carbonate
m strongly cemented, consolidated, indurated
n accumulation of sodium
p disturb by plowing
q accumulation of silica
r strong reduction as a result of groundwater influence
s accumulation of sesquioxide (oxide containing a ratio of three atoms
oxygen and two atoms of another element)
t illuvial accumulation of clay
u unspecified
w in situ alteration as evidence by clay, color, etc
x occurrence of fragipan
y accumulation of gypsum
z accumulation of salts more soluble than gypsum
Eluviation ?
O-horizon
removal;
A-horizon suspension
Topsoil form
E-horizon Leaching ?
zone of
solum removal;
eluviation
(true soil) solution
B-horizon regolith form
subsoil Illuviation ?
zone of
illuviation
deposition
of materials
C-horizon Parent
material
R or D- Solid
horizon bedrock
1. The total land area of the Philippines is
a. 30M square km c. 30M hectares
b. 30M square miles d. 30M acres
22. The minerals that persist from the original rocks and
appear prominently in the soil
a. sedimentary c. quarternary
b. secondary d. primary
23. Mineral that is the primary source of phosphorus
a. quartz c. feldspar
b. apatite d. mica
24. Process of soil mixing by the action of animals as
earthworms, insects
a. dispersion c. flocculation
b. aggregation d. pedoturbation
37. The most likely texture of the soil formed with limestone
as the parent material
a. coarse-textured c. medium-textured
b. moderately coarse textured d. fine-textured
38. A soil that is characterized as strongly acidic, severely
weathered, low organic matter content and with sub-
divisions in the major horizons
a. young soil c. immature soil
b. old soil d. mature soil
39. A soil that is characterized by o.m. accumulation in the
surface soil and little weathering, leaching or
translocation
a. young soil c. immature soil
b. old soil d. mature soil
40. Wind-deposited dust or particles with grain size less than
0.05mm
a. loess c. glacier
b. dune d. losses
41. A parent material that is formed or developed in place
a. sedimentary c. residual
b. alluvial d. colluvial
42. A parent material that has been transported by a river
or stream
a. colluvial b. marine c. glacier d. alluvial
43. Horizontal layers of soil differentiation
a. concretions c. horizons
b. structure d. hardpans