Soil Physical Properties
Unit 2.1 | 9
Students’ Lecture Outline
Detailed Lecture Outline:
Soils and Soil Physical Properties
for students
a. introduction
- What is soil?
a) Definitions
i. Different concepts = Different definitions
• Edaphological (in relation to plant growth)
A mixture of mineral and organic material that is capable of supporting plant life
• Engineering
Mixture of mineral material (sands, gravels and fines) used as a base for construction
• Pedological (sees soil as a distinct entity)
The unconsolidated mineral or organic material on the surface of the earth that has been
subjected to and shows effects of genetic and environmental factors of: climate (including
water and temperature effects), and macro- and microorganisms, conditioned by relief, acting
on parent material over a period of time. Geosphere-Biosphere-Hydrosphere-Atmosphere
interface.
b) Functions of soil
i. Support growth of higher plants
ii. Primary factor controlling fate of water in hydrologic system
iii. Nature’s recycling system
iv. Habitat for organisms
v. Engineering medium
b. How soil is Made
- Soil-forming factors
At one time it was felt that soils were static. In the late 1800s, Russian soil scientists introduced the
concept that soils are dynamic—that they developed to the point where they are now and that
they are evolving into what they will be. They came up with five soil-forming factors that influence
how soils turn out the way they do. The idea is that if all five of the soil-forming factors are the same,
then the soil will be the same. The technical term used for soil formation is pedogenesis.