🧾 Soil Formation and Soil Profile
🌱 Factors Affecting Soil Formation
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Parent Rock:
Determines the texture, mineral content, colour, and chemical properties of the soil.-
Example:
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Black Soil – from igneous rocks (residual)
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Alluvial Soil – from sedimentary rocks (transported)
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Relief (Topography):
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Steep slopes → rapid erosion, thin soil
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Gentle slopes → better water retention, more fertile, balanced erosion
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Climatic Conditions:
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Rainfall and temperature affect weathering of rocks and humus formation
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Living Organisms:
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Plants and animals contribute organic matter (humus)
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Roots break rocks, microorganisms like fungi and bacteria decompose minerals
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Time:
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Older soils have thicker profiles and are more fertile
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Mature soil develops over thousands of years
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🧱 Soil Profile
A soil profile is the vertical section of different soil layers from the surface down to the bedrock.
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Horizon A (Topsoil)
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Rich in organic matter (humus)
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Dark, porous, supports plant roots
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Leaching is common here
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Horizon B (Subsoil)
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Contains inorganic materials like clay, silt, sand
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Less humus, more minerals
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Together with A forms true soil
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Horizon C (Rock Fragments)
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Made of partially weathered rock pieces
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Source of material for true soil
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Horizon D (Parent Rock)
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Also called bedrock
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Unweathered solid rock at the bottom
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🧪 Fun Fact: Europe alone has more than 10,000 types of soil identified by scientists!
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