Basics of Environmental Science

(Rick Simeone) #1

110 / Basics of Environmental Science


importance to us and if we are to use it the more we know about it the better. It is so variable that we
cannot be satisfied in calling it simply ‘the’ soil. It must be classified.


There have been many attempts at soil classification, the first in classical times, but it was not until
the latter part of the last century that a school of Russian scientists at St Petersburg, led by Vasily
Vasilievich Dokuchaev (1840–1903), proposed a theory of pedogenesis on which a formal
classification could be based. It is because of this Russian origin that many soil types have Russian
names, such as ‘podzol’ and ‘chernozem’. The Russian work laid the foundation for what is now
known as ‘soil taxonomy’, but work has continued ever since.


The system most widely used at present was devised by the US Department of Agriculture. This
divides all soils into 11 orders (www.explorer.it/aip/keytax/content.html). The orders are divided
further into sub-orders, great groups, families, and soil series. The orders, with brief descriptions,
are listed in the box.


The 11 soil orders of the US soil taxonomy

Alfisols Soils of climates with 510–1270 mm annual rainfall; most develop
under forests; clay accumulates in the B horizon.
Andisols Volcanic soils, deep and light in texture; contain iron and aluminium
compounds. (This order is sometimes omitted.)
Aridisols Desert soils with accumulations of lime or gypsum; often with salt
layers; little organic matter.
Entisols Little or no horizon development; often found in recent flood plains,
under recent volcanic ash, as wind-blown sand.
Histosols Organic soils; found in bogs and swamps.
Inceptisols Young soils; horizons starting to develop; often wet conditions.
Mollisols Very dark soils; upper layers rich in organic matter; form mainly
under grassland.
Oxisols Deeply weathered soils; acid; low fertility; contain clays of iron and
aluminium oxides.
Spodosols Sandy soils found in forests, mainly coniferous; organic matter,
iron and aluminium oxides accumulated in B horizon; strongly acid.
Ultisols Deeply weathered tropical and subtropical soils; strongly acid; clay
accumulated in B horizon.
Vertisols Clay soils that swell when wet; develop in climates with pronounced
wet and dry seasons; deep cracks appear when dry.

These names and descriptions are reasonably straightforward, but the system becomes much more
abstruse below the level of orders. Suborders have such names as ‘Psamments’, ‘Boralfs’, and
‘Usterts’; the great groups include ‘Haplargids’, ‘Haplorthods’, and ‘Pellusterts’; and among the
subgroups are ‘Aquic Paleudults’, ‘Typic Medisaprists’, and ‘Typic Torrox’.

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