Term
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Definition
aka Surface horizon
The horizon thathas had something eluviate from it. May have an accumulation of organic matter. |
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Definition
The zone in a glacier where ice originates from. In Canada there was one in BC, NWT, and in northern Quebec. |
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Definition
A surface horizon with light colour. Lacks organic matter. Has clay, orion, aluminum, and/or carbon. |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
A surface horizon with dark colour, enriched in organic humic matter. H is for humic. |
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Term
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Definition
Increased phosphorus in the water from manure or fertilizer run-off causes algae to overpopulate. When they die and are eaten by other bacteria, all the oxygen in the water is used up and larger oxygen-breathing life-forms like fish and crustaceans suffocate. Algae are not rooted to the ground, they float freely in the water. |
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Definition
The third most common element in the earth's crust. A mineral with high mobility in the soil when pH is low. A B horizon that has had aluminum illuviate into it is Bf. |
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Term
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Definition
A surface horizon similar to Ah but cultivted. P is for plowed. This horizon will have a perfectly uniform depth because of tillage. In the tillage zone all the layers are mixed. |
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Definition
A mountain glacier in BC. It is receding. |
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Definition
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Definition
aka Subsurface horizon.
The horizon under A. Something has illuviated into it out of the A horizon. |
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Term
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Definition
Extrusive, basic, igneous rock. Has a fine texture. |
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Definition
A B horizon that has had iron and/or aluminium illuviate into it. F is for Fe. Found where the parent material is acidic, such as in PEI. |
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Definition
A process in formation of soil structure. |
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Term
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Definition
The living organism of the Earth. |
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Term
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Definition
Chernozem with very high levels of organic matter. Found in the southern prairies. |
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Term
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Definition
A soil structure type. Aggregates are fist sized. Not desirabe to grow plants in because seed to soil surface area contact is limited (osmosis is not good). |
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Term
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Definition
A B horizzon that is not very well developed. M is for minimal development. Only slightly altered by pedological processes. |
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Term
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Definition
A B horizon that has had sodium salts illuviate into it. N is for Na. Found on the west coast and in Ontario. When dry, Bn becomes extremely hard. When wet, it is like quicksand. |
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Term
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Definition
The type of boundary between soils. Is it a smooth, gradual transition or a hard line? How variable is the depth of the boundary in the landscape? |
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Term
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Definition
Chernozem with medium levels of organic matter. Found in the middle prairies. |
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Term
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Definition
Ah, Bm, Ck
A soil order in Canada. Has a Bm horizon. Has a thin Ah. Minimally developed B horizon. Develops out of regosol. With time it develops into luvisol. Found in forested areas. |
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Term
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Definition
A B horizon that has had clay illuviate into it. T is for the German word for clay: "ton". Not necessarily clay textured. |
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Term
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Definition
The mass of soil solids divided by the total volume of the soil (including pores).
Higher BD results in shorter, thicker roots.
Cultivation increases buld density over time. |
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Term
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Definition
The horizon underneath B. Unaffected by pedological progresses. Mainly salts, carbonates, gleying, and parent material. |
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Term
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Definition
CaCO3
Aka Lime
A type of limestone. Used to raise the pH of soils. When it dissolves, it turns into Ca+2, HCO3, and OH-. Ca+2 takes up two exchance sites rather than one. It reacts with H+ and OH- form water and H2CO3 or CO3. How well it raises pH depends on how finely ground it is, its purity, and the CEC of the soil. Adding to the top 15 cm of the horizon and moves downwards 2 cm - 3 cm/year. The impact of liming lasts only for a while, then the pH goes down again. How fast it decreases depends on CEC. No matter what the CEC, the same amount of lime is needed to maintain a high pH; lower CEC soils need more frequent liming with less calcite. |
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Term
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Definition
550 million years ago. In the Paleozoic Era. |
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Term
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Definition
Only 13% of Canada has class 1 - 6 land, cultivated land. 4.3% is class 1 - 3. Most of Canada is rocky, or doesn't have enough soil. A lot of Canada is too mountainous. 58% of Canada is wild. 26% is forested. 1% is urban. |
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Definition
A region of Canada with an igneous and metamorphic bedrock. Formed during the Precambrian era. |
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Term
Canadian System of Soil Classification |
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Definition
Similar to the classification of organisms. Nested groups:
Order > Great Groups > Subgroups > Families > Series |
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Term
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Definition
Cation Exchange Capacity
A measure of the soil's ability to hold onto cations. |
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Term
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Definition
A form of soil structure stabilization. Clay, organic matter, and oxide coatings can cement the soil. |
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Term
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Definition
70 million years ago - present
The most recent geologicl period. Includes the Recent period, Pleistocene period, and Tertiary period. Mammoths, sabre-tooth tigers, and early humans existed during this period. |
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Term
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Definition
An ancient lake that existed downstream of Lake Eerie near Ottawa. |
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Definition
Ah, Bm, Ck
A soil order in Canada. The term is Russian in origin. Has a deep Ah horion high in organic matter. Has a Bm horion, but is not classified as brunisol due to the overriding Ah horizon. Found in the southern grassland praries. The perennial grass is what gives the soil such high organic matter. from the south moving northwards there is brown, dark brown, black, and then dark grey chernozems, then luvisols. |
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Term
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Definition
The best places to build a city is on agricultural land. The soil is easy to dig, forests have already been cleared, there's good drainage, and it's flat. Villages form on good agricultural land and then evolve into large cities. |
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Term
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Definition
Particles under 0.002 mm in size. A primary particle. Part of the basis for soil texture. A region of the textural triangle. Has a sticky consistency when wet, and is hard when dry. Feels smooth when rubbed betwen fingers. Moderate to strong shine. Forms very strong caste. Forms a ribonn greater than 5 cm long. Particles are flat like tiny sheets of paper. Generally negatively charged. Soils high in clay tend to have columnar structure.
90 billion particles and 8 million cm3 of surface area per gram of clay.
Bulk density of 1.05 M/m3 and a pore space ratio of 60%.
Has a resistance of 700 - 770 g/m3 against plowing |
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Term
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Definition
A region of the textural triangle. Feels smooth and floury. Has a slight shine. Forms a strong caste. Forms a ribbon 2.5 cm - 5 cm long.
Has a bulk density of 1.1 Mg/m3 and a pore space ratio of 59%.
When moist it has a resistance of 420 - 490 g/cm3 against plowing. |
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Term
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Definition
A pedological process soil formation factor. Effects vegetation, biological activity, weathering, and translocation. Climate effects the quantity and type of organisms. The warmer and wetter the climate, the faster the rate of soil transformation. |
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Term
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Definition
Sand with a particle size 1 mm to 0.5 mm.
750 particles and 23 cm3 of surface area per gram of coarse sand. |
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Term
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Definition
The colour of soil. Measured with a Munsell soil colour chart. Tells us organic matter content, redox potential, and mineralogy. Darker soils have more organic matter. |
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Term
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Definition
A soil structure type. Clay particles are making column-like stacks which expand and contract with moisture. When dry they have vertical cracks. These pores are too big for plant roots. |
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Term
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Definition
A form of soil degradation. Caused by traffic over soil. Not to be confused with shear. Bulk density increases and there is a loss in larger pores. Aggregates are re-arranged.
Compaction can be reduced by decreasing axle load, reducing tire pressure, radial tires, increased tire size, traffic only over dry soil, and reduced traffic. |
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Term
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Definition
A soil physical property. Potential for compaction. |
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Term
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Definition
Transported sedimentary rock. Formed out of gravel, sand, and silt. |
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Term
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Definition
How sticky or plastic a soil is when wet, and how friable or firm a soil is when dry. |
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Term
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Definition
A much larger scale glacier than a mountain glacier. Moves because of pressure. Has a center of accumulation, and then flows into the lower contours of the land. |
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Term
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Definition
An ancient deserted city in South America. Had a very advanced society before the soil in the valley eroded away, polluting their water source and causing agricultural failure that lead to sickness and death. |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
135 million years ago. In the Mesoic era. The bedrock of some areas of Ontario formed during this period. |
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Term
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Definition
aka Permafrost
A soil order in Canada. Has a Y horizon. Frozen soils. By area, the most common soil type in Canada. Found in the northern regions of Canada. |
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Term
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Definition
A glaciolacustrine landform caused by settling sand from glacial outwash spillways. Wide, slow-moving rivers. Forms large sandy plains. |
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Term
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Definition
A kame formed when the river on top of a glavier ran off the edge of the glacier. Debris piles on the edge of the glavier, resulting in a hill. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
410 million years ago. In the Pleozoic era. The bedrock in some areas of Ontario formed during this period. |
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Term
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Definition
Burrow in the soil, creating verticle macropores through which water can drain quickly, bypassing soil filtering, risking pathogens and contaminants entering the water table. |
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Term
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Definition
The first soil scientists ever. Looked at soils from all over Russia and found that soils are differ based on geography and ecosystem. Soil is a product of the ecosystem. |
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Term
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Definition
CaMg(CO3)2
A type of limestone. An alternative to using calcite. Same chemical effect, except that dolomite has two carbonates rather than one, giving it a greater capacity to change pH. Dolomite is cheaper than calcite. |
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Term
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Definition
A glacial landform. An end moraine where the glacier started coming forwards again, and smushed the moraine forwards before receding again. A tear-drop cross section hill. |
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Term
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Definition
A process that develops soil structure. Causes shrinking, swelling, and formation of cracks in soil. |
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Term
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Definition
The movement of material from one horizon into another. Usually due to water flow. |
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Term
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Definition
Recessional moraine. A moraine formed at the edge of a receding glacier. |
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Term
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Definition
A form of soil structure stabilization. Roots and fungal hyphae enmesh soil aggregates. |
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Term
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Definition
A glaciofluvial formation formed when rivers form underneath a glacier between the ice and bedrock. The ice erodes away, and gravel falls to the floor of the bedrock. When the glacier recedes, it leaves a positive mound of gravel.
Eskers are uncommon on the landscape because people harvest them for sand and gravel. |
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Term
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Definition
Igneous rock that solidified from molten laval while outside of the crust. Cooled quickly and had no time to form crystalline shapes. |
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Term
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Definition
Undecomposed organic material. Leaves, pine needles, and other dead organsm matter. Found in Of horizons. |
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Term
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Definition
A weed that has very deep roots, making it difficult to exterminate. |
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Term
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Definition
Sand with particle size 0.25 mm - 0.1 mm.
46,000 particles and 91 cm3 surface area per gram of soil. |
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Term
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Definition
The lower slope of a hill. |
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Term
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Definition
A process that develops soil structure. An ice lens forms int the frozen zone of the soil, heaving the ground. Can kill plants by breaking the taproot. |
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Term
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Definition
The region of the soil that is frozen during the winter. The upper layer of the soil. |
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Term
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Definition
A horizon suffix used to describe evidence of reduced conditions. G is for gleyed. No oxygen results in the reduced blue-grey coloured form of iron.
Found in B and C horizons. Can be in an A horizon, but organic matter would overshaddow the blue-gey colour. |
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Term
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Definition
Intrusive, basic, igneous rock. Coarse texture. |
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Term
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Definition
A person who did the first soil survey of Canada in 1914. |
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Term
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Definition
A soil formation factor. Creates parent material. |
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Term
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Definition
A mass of moving ice that can be kilometers thick. Includes continental and mountain glaciers. Can move forwards or backwards, depending on the accumulation rate and melting rate. As it moves forward, it picks up al the soil and rocks off hte bedroc. As it moves backwards, it dumps it all out again. A glacier has an accumulation zone, waste zone, and stagnant zone. When it melts, it creates meltwater. |
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Term
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Definition
Glacial landforms formed from moving glacial meltwater. Includes outwash plains, spillways, interlobate moraines, kames, and eskers. |
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Term
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Definition
Glacial landforms formed from glacial lakes. Includes deltas, and lacustrine silts and clays. |
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Term
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Definition
Ap, Bg, Ckg
A soil order in Canada. Soil that is wet for most of the year. Iron is reduced in the low-oxygen conditions, and gives the soil a blue-grey colour. May have pockets of oxidized red iron due to air pores. Found in the middle zone of topographical features. Moving up the slope, it turns into gleyed podzol and then podzol. |
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Term
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Definition
Have gravel of a specific particle size underneath the sod for optimal drainage. |
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Term
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Definition
Intrusive, acidic, igneous rock. Coarse texture. |
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Term
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Definition
A soil structure type. Half of the aggregates are below 0.5 mm in size. The most desirable soil structure for growing plants. |
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Term
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Definition
Luvisol found in southern Ontario due to limestone pockets. |
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Term
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Definition
Luvisol found in the northern prairies. Doesn't have an Ah horizon, just a LFH. If you cut down the trees in the area, the leves blow away and the soil is left with near to to no organic material. |
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Term
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Definition
A glacial landform. A moraine formed underneath a glacier that is moving backwards, dropping debris as it recedes. Debris is spread out evenly. Boulders, stones, sand, silt, and clay. |
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Term
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Definition
A pest. Create large holes in the soil. |
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Term
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Definition
Wild plants start growing as soon as the soil thaws in March and die at first frost in autumn. Domestic plants start growing in May and are harvested in July or August. Much reduced growing season. |
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Term
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Definition
Sometimes hills can prevent land from being farmable. |
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Term
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Definition
An area in southern Ontario with organic soil. Discovered by an Englishman with the last name of Holland. The area was originally marshy and wet all year round, resulting in a huge buildup of slowly decaying organic matter. It was drained and is now used to grow muck crops (root vegetables). The organic matteris decaying faster now that it is drained. |
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Term
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Definition
A layer in the soil. There are different types. Characteristics: thickness, colour, texture, structure, consistence, boundary type, and pH. |
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Term
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Definition
Completely decomposed organic matter. No identifiable structures whatsoever. Just dark, homogenous organic soil. Found in Oh horizons. |
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Term
Hydraulic conductivity (k) |
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Definition
The speed at which water moves through soil. Important to know for drainage, leaching, septic fields, and retention in ponds, canals, and landfills. Determined using the Darcy's experiment. Hydraulic conductivity decreases with water content of soil. |
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Term
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Definition
A method of determining soil texture. Soil is dropped into water and then the Stokes Law is used to determine the times when particles of certain size will be settled. At these times, a density measurement of the upper part of the water is taken and used to make a particle size distribution curve. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
A formation between the frozen zone and thawed zone of the soil. Causes heaving. |
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Term
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Definition
A type of rock classification. Rock that came out of a volcano. Cooled and hardened magma. Granite, rhyolite, gabbro, and basalt. |
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Term
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Definition
The movement of material into a horizon from another horion. Usually due to water flow. |
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Term
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Definition
A recessional moraine formed when the glacier receded over a large obstacle such as a mountain. Has a tear-drop shape. |
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Term
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Definition
Igneous rock that solidified from molten rock while it was underneath the crust. It cooled slowly, giving it enough time to form crystalline shapes. |
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Term
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Definition
A mineral in the soil. The fourth most common element in the earth's crust. A micronutrient. Has high mobility in the soil when pH is low. When oxidized it is a ruddy-yellow colour. When it is unoxidized, such as in a permanently wet soil, it is a blue-grey colour. A B horizon that has iron illuviated into it is Bf. |
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Term
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Definition
180 million years ago. In the Mesoic era. |
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Term
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Definition
A horizon suffix used to describe the presence of calcium salts. Limestone parent material. Has a basic pH. You can idendify it with acid; acid will cause it to bubble. |
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Term
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Definition
A glaciogfluvial landforms. Formed when rivers of meltwater formed overtop of the glacier. Include delta kames and moulin kames. |
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Term
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Definition
A 1:1 clay structure. One silica tetrahedron sheet is bonded to an octahedron sheet. One sheet has no charge, but is polar; the octahedral side is more positive. Hydrogen bonding then forms between these bonded sheets due to the polarity. Low shrink-swell potential.
CEC is 2 - 6 cmole/kg.
Surface area is 8 - 16 m2/g. |
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Term
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Definition
A glacial landform of an accumulation of silts and clay in a stillwater glacial lake. Inclues deltas, and silt and clay plains. |
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Term
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Definition
Ancient southern Lake Huron. Was smaller than Lake Huron. |
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Term
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Definition
Ancient Lake Ontario. Was larger than Lake Ontario. |
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Term
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Definition
An ancient lake formed when Ontario Island separated Lake Whittlesay in two. |
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Term
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Definition
An ancient lake that covered southern Ontario at the Seaforth moraine near the Lake Huron lobe of the Wisonsin Glacier |
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Term
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Definition
An ancient lae formed as the Ontario-Eerie and Simcoe-Kawartha lobes retreated. |
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Term
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Definition
A glaciofluvial landform formed when metlwater was trapped between the glacial fron and the end moraine, making a lake. Silts and clay setttled. Produces a very flat landscape with silty clay soils. |
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Term
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Definition
Ancient norhtern Lake Huron. Was smaller than Lake Huron. |
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Term
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Definition
An ancient lake that covered most of southern Ontario at the Port Huron moraine of the Wisconsin Glacier. |
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Term
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Definition
A rating for a land's ability to support crops. 1 is the best land. 7 means it is impossible cultivate anything on the land. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Forest Humus Layer
An organic horion. Can be at various stages of decomposition. A usually thin layer of pine needles and leaves. |
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Term
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Definition
Chernozem with low levels of organic matter. Found in the northern prairies. |
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Term
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Definition
Chemical precipitate sedimentary rock. Includes calcite and dolomite. Ontario has a limestone bedrock because it was once covered by a shallow equatorial sea containing coral. |
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Term
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Definition
The solid crust of the earth. |
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Term
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Definition
A region of the textural triangle. When gardeners use this term, they are referring to something else.
Has a bulk density of 1.2 Mg/m3 and a pore space ratio of 55%. Feels sticky, with evidence of graininess. Forms a weak to moderate caste. Forms a ribbon less than 2.5 cm long. |
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Term
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Definition
Ap, Ae, Bt, Ck
A soil order in Canada. Has a Bt horizon. Clay has illuviated into the B horizon. Exists on calcareous parent material. Includes grey-brown luvisol and grey luvisol. Found in BC, the north prairies, Ontario, and in the Maritimes. Develops out of brunisol. Deciduous trees flourish in this soil. |
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Term
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Definition
A pore greater than 30 μm in size. Have rapid drainage. Usually air filled. Roots, crop residue, soil fauna, and fungal hyphae live in macropores. |
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Term
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Definition
Energy, water, and nutrient cycling is controlled. At harvest a large amount of organic matter is removed from the system. Domestic plants and animals. Low diversity. Shorter growin season. Application of nutrients and soil amendments. Irrigation. Some plants residues returned, but organic matter inputs are lower than in a natural ecosystem. The equilibrium of organic matter is lower, and takes time to drop to this level when first cultivated. Efforts to improve organic matter can only raise the equilibrium a small amount; it will never reach the same levels as a natural ecosystem. |
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Term
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Definition
A soil structure type. Big huge aggregates, or the soil is one large aggregate in itself. Very limited pores space. Plants cannot grow in it and water can't move through it. Can be caused by compaction. |
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Term
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Definition
Water that has melted off a glacier. Creates many glacial land features. Sorts particle size based on its speed. Only large particles like boulders and rocks can move out of fast-moving water. Clay, silt, and sand can only drop out of still meltwater lakes. |
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Term
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Definition
Partially decomposed organic matter. No identifiable structures except for large twigs. Found in Om horizons. |
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Term
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Definition
220 million years ago - 135 million years
Includes the Cretaceous, Jurassic, and Triassic periods. |
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Term
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Definition
A pore 0.2 - 30 μm in size. Smaller mesopores are more likely to be water filled. Bacteria can live in them. Bacteria are protected from predation in smaller mesopores. Fungi, nematodes, and protozoa live in larger mesopores. |
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Term
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Definition
Transformed igneous or sedimentary rock. Was exposed to extreme heat and/or pressure that transformed the rock into what it is today. |
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Term
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Definition
A pore less than 0.2 μm in size. Normally water filled. Bacteria cannot fit into them. |
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Term
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Definition
The middle slope of a hill. |
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Term
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Definition
Not organic soils. Main soil ingredient are primary particles rather than organic matter. |
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Term
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Definition
The minerals in the soil. |
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Term
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Definition
355 million years ago. In the Paleozoic era. |
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Term
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Definition
A moraine of the Wisconsin Glacier by the Lake Huron lobe. |
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Term
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Definition
A glacial landform. Includes end moraines, ground moraines, and drumlins. A big mass of debris left by a glacier. |
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Term
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Definition
Spots in the soil profile. Red mottling in a gleysol is caused by aerated pores that oxidize the iron. |
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Term
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Definition
A kame formed when the river on the glacier falls into a hole in the glacier. Debris is piled underneath. Results in a cone shaped hill. |
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Term
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Definition
A much smaller scale glacier than a continental glacier. Moves due to slope, not because of pressure. |
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Term
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Definition
A sticky substance released by roots as they grow through macropores. Stabilize the soil. |
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Term
Munsell soil colour chart |
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Definition
A tool used to identify soil colour. Measures colour based on hue, chroma, and value. Colours are standard all over the world. |
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Term
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Definition
Energy, water, and nutrient cycling is not controlled. No removal of mass unless there is a large disturbance. Wild plants and animals. High diversity. Longer growing season. No nutrients or soil amendments applied. No irrigation, rainfall only. All animal and plant residues returned. Organic matter ouputs are low, so the organic matter equilibrium is much higher than in a managed ecosystem. |
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Term
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Definition
Ancient Georgian Bay. Had a lake and river complex that drained towards Ottawa. |
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Term
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Definition
A practice of never tilling soil. Changes in soil take place over several years. |
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Term
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Definition
An organic horizon. F is for fibric material. Early stage of decomposition. Leaf and pine needle structures are still available. |
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Term
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Definition
An effect from an activity that occurs away from where the activity is done. Example: cows in a river cause algal blooms downstream. |
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Term
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Definition
An organic horizon. Humic material. Late stage of decomposition. |
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Term
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Definition
An organic horizon. Mesic material. Intermediate stage of decomposition. |
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Term
Ontario geological history |
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Definition
Bedrock is made from carbonite materials. 400 millions years ago. Ontario was under a shallow equatorial sea. Over millions of years of coral, a sediment of calcium carbonite formed. The sea slowly regressed, leaving some areas of Ontario with thicker bedrock than others. Glacrial activity ground it up, sorted it, and distributed it across Canada. Canadian soils are very young compared to other parts of the world, only 15,000 years old. |
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Term
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Definition
An island in southern Ontario that formed when the Wisconsin Glacier receded. |
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Term
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Definition
490 million years ago. In the Paleozoic era. |
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Term
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Definition
1% - 5% of an A horizon. Contains 95% of soil nutrients. Living things or dead plants and animals, excretory products, soil fora, and humus in the soil at various stages of decomposition. Develops very slowly. It has a darker colour. Crucial component of soil. Effects the physical and chemical properties of the soil. Organic matter is sticky. It is the glue that holds aggregates together, stabilizing soil structure. Increases water availability Cultivation decreases organic matter. Has many OH- groups. CEC is very high, but pH dependent; OH- groups dissociate in high pH. Can chelate metals. Depending on the C:N ratio, when it decomposes it either mineralizes or immobilies N. Can absorb agricultural chemicals. Loss of organic matter is a form of soil degradation. |
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Term
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Definition
aka Muck
A soil order in Canada. Not to be confused with the agricultural management technique.
Has a different classification system than mineral soils, which is based on the decomposition stage. Found in pockets in the prairies and Ontario where it is wet all year around, such as the Holland marsh. Found in the lower areas of topographical features, forests, swamps, and diked-off areas. The water slows decomposition, causing a build-up of organic matter. |
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Term
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Definition
A pedological process soil formation factor. Effects carbon, weathering, and development of soil structure. Influenced by topography, climate, and geological materials. A source of organic material. The quantity and type of organisms determines the kind of organic material formed. |
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Definition
A glaciofluvial landform. Wide, slow, glacial rivers. Sand and stones falls through the water at this speed. Results in relatively flat, sandy plains. |
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Definition
A moraine of the Wisconsin Glacier by the Georgian Bay lobe. |
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Definition
550 million years ago - 275 million years ago
Includes the Permian, Pennsylvanian, Mississippian, Devonian, Silurian, Ordovician, and Cambrian periods. Dinosaurs existing during this period. |
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Definition
Made a geological report of Canada in the 1860's and declared the prairies to be "desert or semi-desert in character, which can never be expected to become occupied by settlers". Turns out he just visited on a dry year and it's fine. |
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Definition
aka Bedrock
A geological process soil formation factor. Effected by weathering and glaciers (and glacial meltwater). Bedrock determines chemical composition of soils, and glacial activity determines soil texture. |
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Definition
The mass of soil solids divided by the volume of soil solids. In Ontrio it is around 2.65. Can be higher in tropical areas. |
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Term
Particle size distribution curve |
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Definition
A graph of the % amount of various particle sizes in a soil. Determined using the hydrometer method and Stokes Law. Used to determine soil texture. |
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Definition
Has a pore space ratio of 95%. |
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Definition
A soil formation factor. Determined by climate, topography, organisms, and time. Creates soil. |
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Definition
A combination of the atmosphere, biosphere, hydrosphere, and lithosphere. The soils of the earth. |
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Definition
330 million years ago. In the Paleozoic era. |
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Term
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Definition
275 million years ago. In the Paleozoic era. |
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Definition
pH = -log[H+]
The acidity of soil. A high number means basic. A low number measn acidic. Measured with a pH electrode or coloured dyes such as bromothymol blue. There is an equilibrium between the H+ on exchange sites and in the soil solution. CEC, calcium carbonate, and sodium carbonate can act as buffers. Depends on the mineralogy, carbonate levels, and management. In southern Ontario soils are basic. As you go north it gets more acidic. Pines and spruces prefer acidic soil. You can raise the pH of soil by liming it. |
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Definition
A macronutrient. Mobile in a plant. As pH goes up, availability goes down. Found in ATP, DNA, and RNA. Held tightly in the soil. Attaches to soil solids, not soil water; immobile in the soil. May build up in the soil. May erode away if the soil is eroding, causing eutrophication of water bodies. Once in the water, it is difficult to recover. P builds up in the soil if farms import feed from off-farm and spread manure. |
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Definition
A method of determining soil texture. Similar to the hydrometer method, but samples are taken of the water at different times and analyzed. |
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Definition
Light, heat, support, water, and nutrients. Soil provides support, water and nutrients. For seeds, it also provides the heat needed to germinate. |
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Definition
The earth's plates are moving around. 500 million years ago Ontario was on the equator! |
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Definition
A soil structure type. Horizontal structural units stacked on top of each other. Not many vertical cracks for water or plants to infiltrate through. |
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Definition
1 million years ago. During the Cenozoic era. |
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Definition
LFH, Ae, Bf, Ck
A soil order in Canada. Exists on igneous based parent material. Has a Bf horizon. Iron illuviated into the B horizon, making it red in colour. Has a low pH. May leave silicon in the A horizon bare, making bright white coloured pockets. Found on the Canadian Shield where there are forests. Found at the top of topographical features, moving down the slope it becomes gleyed podzol then gleysol. |
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Definition
In 1995 there were only 5 billion people. Today there are 7 billion. There was a big spike in the 60s, but crop yields also shot up at that time. Plant breeding, soil and land management. Problem: no more new land or soil is being created |
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Definition
The relative amounts of macropores, mesopores, and micropores in a soil. |
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Definition
One minus bulk density divided by particle density. Gives the percent of volume in the soil that is pores. |
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Definition
A moraine of the Wisonsin Glacier. Formed Lae Whittlesey. |
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Definition
Has a pore space ratio of 60% - 80%. |
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Definition
48000 millioni years ago. There was no life on earth. The Canadian shield formed during this era |
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Definition
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Definition
The most recent geological period. We are in it. In the Cenozoic era. |
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Definition
Ah, Ck
A soil order in Canada. Young, relatively uneveloped soil. Lacks a B horizon. With time it turns into brunisol. Found mainly in NWT and the Yukon near the Mackenzie River, but also in areas that are frozen most of the year, or have been recently disturbed for example by human activity or a natural disaster. |
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Definition
Extrusive, basic, igneous rock. Fine texture. |
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Definition
A glaciofluvial landform. A deep valley with a small river at the bottom. Used to be a glacial spillway that carved the valley. |
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Definition
Soil is a rooting medium. Gives root space in the form of pores. |
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Definition
A horizon suffix used to describe the presence of soluble salts. S is for salt. Any ion in a solution is a soluble salt. Can be any salt, not necessarily a sodium salt. |
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Definition
Rock particles 0.05 mm to 2 mm in size. A primary particle. Part of the basis for soil texture. Particles are visible with the naked eye. Feels rough, grainy, and gritty. Not sticky or plastic when moist. Fails to form a caste or ribbon. A region of the textural triangle. Doesn't aggregate very well. Soil structure is usually single grain. Has a bulk density of 1.55 Mg/m3 and pore space ratio of 42%. Has a lot of macropores. It has a resistance of 210 g/cm3 against plowing. |
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Definition
Transported sedimentary rock. Formed out of sand. |
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Definition
Has a bulk density of 1.4 Mg/m3 and a pore space ratio fo 48%. When moist it has a resistance of 210 - 280 g/cm3 against plowing. |
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Definition
A moraine of the Wisconsin Glacier near the Lake Huron loce. Lake Maumee developed. |
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Definition
Rock that formed underneath water and then was cemented together under great pressure. Chemical precipitates or transported material. |
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Definition
Transported sedimentary rock. Formed out of clay. |
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Definition
Often confused with compaction. Soil is moved aside, but the bulk density remains relatively the same. |
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Definition
The upper slope of a hill. |
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Definition
A soil physical property. The potential of a soil to shrink and swell. High in clay soils. |
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Definition
A method of determining texture of sand and gravel. |
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Definition
Rock particles 0.002 mm to 0.05 mm in size. A primary particle. Part of the basis for soil texture. Feels smooth and powdery like flour. Particles are too small to see. Not plastic or sticky when moist. A region of the textural triangle. The particle most susceptible to erosion. It takes 8 hours to drop 10 cm through still water.
5,776,000 particles and 454 cm3 surfacea rea per gram of silt. |
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Definition
A region in the textural tringle. Has a medium water retention curve. Has the highest available water. When moist it has a resistance of 350 - 420 g/cm3 aginst plowing. |
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Term
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Definition
430 million years ago. In the Paleozoic era. The bedrock of some areas of Ontario formed during this period. |
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Definition
A soil structure type. Lacks any structure. Particles are loose and random. Sandy soils. |
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Term
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Definition
A 2:1 clay structure. A silica tetrahedron sheet bonds to both sides of an octahedron sheet. Ions attach to the sides of the silica tetrahedron sheets, pushing individual sheets apart. High shrink-swell potential.
CEC is 60 - 100 cmole/kg.
Surface area is 750 - 820 m2/g. |
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Term
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Definition
The seventh most common element in the earth's crust. Has a high atomic radius. It breaks up clay aggregates by pushing apart the clay particles. |
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Definition
aka not Dirt
A naturally occuring mineral and/or organic material at least 10 cm deep. Not only part of the environment; a product of the environmnent. A productive resource. Soils have been forming for as long as the land has existed. It is effected by as well as formed out of orgnaisms that live and on it. Formed by climate, geological factors, life, and time. |
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Term
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Definition
50% mineral, 25% water, 25% air, 4-5% organic matter. Different soils have different percentages. |
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Definition
The way soil forms. Can determine the classification of the soil. Additions, losses, transfers, and transformations create soil horions. Geological and pedological processes occur. |
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Term
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Definition
A hole in the ground. Looks at many characteristics of the soil. |
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Definition
A relatively young science. The study of soil as a natural resource on the surface of the earth, including soil fomration, classificatio, mapping, and fertility. The biology, physics, chemistry, and management of soil. Soil is extremely complex. Just one gram of soil has more organisms than there are people on earth. Soil is the contact point for all life on earth. We cannot grow enough food to support our population hydroponically. |
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Definition
A map of soil types. Soil is not as uniform as you think. When they made tha map they were probably not very accurate. Drive-by reckoning more so than actual pit digging. Often what you find in real life is completely different from what's on the map. |
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Definition
Ah, Ahe, Bnt, Csk
A soil order in Canada. Has a Bnt horizon. Has a build-up of sodium salts. Found in pockets in the prairies. High pH. Toxic to plants. The salt can osmotically drain water out of plants. The salt pushes clay sheets aprt, breaking up aggregates and giving the soil bad pysical properties for growing plants. When it is dry, evapotranspiration draws salt to the surface; the effect appears like a blanket of snow. When it is wet, the salt is washed down to the lower horizons. |
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Term
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Definition
A glacioflvial landform. A thin, fast river of meltwater coming from a glacier. Can carve a river valley. Only larger rocks and stones can fall through the water at this speed. Riverbed is rocky and stony. |
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Term
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Definition
Slicken sides. A horizon suffix used to describe wedge shaped peds. In a clay soil, vertical cracks form. Rain smoothens the sides of the cracs, making "slicken sides". |
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Definition
A process in the formation of soil structure. Cementing and enmeshment. The soil becomes stable and erodes less easily. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Used to determine texture from the hydrometer or pipette method.
t = h / (Kr2)
K = 347,000/cm*s |
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Term
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Definition
A soil physical property. The arrangement of individual soil aggregates into structures. Parent material is separated into secondary units. Single grain, granular blocky, columnar, platy, and massive. More stable strcuture do not erode as easily. Structure is developed by dring, freezing, thawing, and biological activities.
Characteristics: particle density, bulk density, volume fractrion of pores, and pore size, distribution, and continuity.
Determined by organic matter, water, trafifc, and tillage. Structure effects water movement, aeration, root penetration, ease of cultivation, and erosion.
Controlled by management: improved with reduced tillage, crop residue, crop rotation, manure, adding organic matter, and reducing compaction.
Loss of structure is a form of soil degradation. |
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Definition
The biggest driver of the ecosystem. It drives the water cycle. |
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Term
Susceptibility to frost action |
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Definition
A soil physical property. |
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Term
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Definition
70 million years ago. During the Cenozoic era. |
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Term
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Definition
A soil physical property. Defined on relative proportion of rocks, stones, sand, silt, and clay. Generally cannot be controlled by management. Texture determines volume and size of pores, water movement, aeration, root penetration, ease of cultivation, and ions in soil. It is determined using sieves and the hydrometer or pipette method. |
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Term
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Definition
A diagram showing different proportions of the primary particles sand, silt, and clay. Regions on the triangle are different soil types. |
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Definition
A perforated pipe burried in the ground that takes away excess water. Used to be burried with shovels, so only the worst drained areas had tile. Now they use a machine and lasers to install them, so more tile can be installed. Plants form deeper roots in the spring and are better prepared for seasonal water deficit. Have more economic return when growing high-value crops. |
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Term
Disturbing the soil. The profile below the tillage zone is different. Changes in the soil occur within a year timespan. |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
A pedological process soil formation factor. Effecs progressive weathering. Transformation, loses, transfers, and translocations. |
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Term
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Definition
A pedological process soil formation factor. Effects drainage, seasonal average soil water content, erosion, and translocation.
Higher soils are dryer, have less organisms, less organic matter, and are subject to erosion. They have a thinner A horizon.
Lower soil are wetter, have more organic matter, and have a thick A horizon.
A factor in water erosion and in the USLE equation. Determined based on slope angle (S), and length of slope (L). Erosion can be decreased by building terraces. |
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Term
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Definition
220 million years ago. In the Mesoic era. |
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Term
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Definition
A military-developed mapping system that uses meter by meter grids. |
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Term
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Definition
A horizon suffix used to describe vertical cracks. |
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Term
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Definition
A soil order in Canada. Soil with high clay content. Soil with deep vertical cracks due to dry clay soils. Found in the grassland areas. |
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Term
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Definition
A zone in a glacier where debris is dumped off the glacier. |
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Term
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Definition
A glacier that receded off of Ontario, created Ontario island. The Overriding moraine, Mitchell morraine, Seaforth moraine, and Port Huron moaraine were created. |
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Term
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Definition
A horizon suffix used to describe cryoturbation. Freezing and thawing causes mixing to occur in the soil. Water expands when it freezes. |
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Term
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Definition
A horizon suffix used to describe a layer of permafrost. Frozen all year round. |
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Term
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Definition
Have a low pH. Aluminum becomes toxic, resulting in short, stubby roots, and inhibiting nodule formation. Manganese becomes toxic. Calcium, magnesium and molybdenum become unavailable. Rhizobium bacteria die. |
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Term
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Definition
A form of soil degradation. |
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Term
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Definition
A type of microfauna. Single-celled heterotrophic bacteria with fungal attributes. They form networks of filaments. There are 107 to 108 individual actinomycetes in a gram of soil; 400 kg - 500 kg/ha. Actinomycetes are responsible for the distinctive scent of soil. |
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Term
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Definition
The attracting force between water molecules and other surfaces. It is a factor in capillary rise and matric potential. |
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Term
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Definition
A factor in the rate of decomposition. Oxygen speeds up decomposition. Aerobic organisms decompose faster than anaerobic organisms. |
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Term
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Definition
Fix nitrogen at a rate of 130 kg - 160 kg/ha. Its residue has a C:N ratio of 13:1. This crop has a low cropping practices C value. It is a permanent ground cover for 3 years. |
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Term
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Definition
A type of microflora. Includes blue-green algae. Some algae is beneficial and some is not. |
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Term
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Definition
An aluminium atom with six OH- groups attached to it in an octahedral shape. Has a -3 charge. A building block of cla. Forms octahedral sheets. Isomorphic substitution of magnesium in the place of aluminium results in a -4 charge. |
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Term
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Definition
NH3
Used as a cleaner. It kills all respiring cells, including plant cells. During nitrogen conversion, there is risk of ammonia toxicity. It can be tured into urea by adding CO2, turned into nitric acid by adding O2, and turned into ammonium nitrate by adding nitric acid. |
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Term
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Definition
A nitrogen loss. As pH goes up, the NH4 levels go down and the NH3 levels go up. Caused by improper application of anhydrous ammonia, urea, or manure. |
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Term
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Definition
NH4+
A cation. Has a large molecular radius. Attaches to CEC sites, so it is stable in the soil. A form of N that plants can uptake. Once taken up, N is organic matter. |
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Term
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Definition
NH4NO3
34-0-0
A nitrogen fertilizer. Made by mixing ammonia and nitric acid. A component of UAN. Can be used for making explosives. |
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Term
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Definition
Organisms that can decompose without oxygen. Not as efficient at decomposition as oxygen-breathing organisms. They are why decomposition is not at zero when the water saturation of a soil is at maximum. Instead of oxygen they use NO3 then Mn+2, then Fe+2, then H2S, in this order as these chemicals become limiting. Include denitrification bacteria. |
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Term
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Definition
NH2
82-0-0
A nitrogen fertilizer. If applied incorrectly, can lead to ammonia volatilization, |
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Term
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Definition
Macrofauna that include earthworms. |
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Term
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Definition
Human originated soruces of soil acidity. Include ammonia fertilizers and acid rain. |
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Term
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Definition
The point of contact between a plant and the fungus which infects it in a mycorrhizae relationship. A structure that looks like the core of a bunch of grapes. Enhances the amount of surface area between plant and fungi. |
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Term
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Definition
Macrofauna that include insects. |
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Term
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Definition
N2
78% of the atmosphere is nitrogen. It takes a large amount of energy to break the triple bond between the two nitrogen atoms. No plant can do this. Some bacteria can fix it into a form that plants can uptake, including rhizobium bacteria. It can be turned into ammonia via the Haber process. |
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Term
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Definition
A soil organism that gets carbon from the atmospher in the form of CO2. Most are photosynthetic. |
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Term
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Definition
Perform nitrification. Get energy from oxidizing NH4. Get carbon from CO2. Include nitrosomonas and nitrobacter. |
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Term
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Definition
The proportion of soil water that can be readily absorbed by plants. The difference between FC and WP. With added organic matter, this increases. |
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Term
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Definition
Fix nitrogen at a rate of 0.3 kg/ha. |
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Term
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Definition
There are 108 to 1010 individual bacterias in a gram of soil; 400 kg - 5000 kg/ha. Important in almost every soil organic process. There is a wide range of enzyme activity. Can convert NH4 to NO3, perform redox reactions, and fix atmospheric nitrogen. The average person has 10 times more bacterial cells on/in them than human cells. |
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Term
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Definition
A heterotroph that eats bacteria. |
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Term
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Definition
The portion of the CEC (no matter what size) that is taken up by basic cation. Expressed as a percentage. As pH goes up, base saturation goes up. |
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Term
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Definition
Have a high pH. Most micronutrients become unavailable. Ammonia and nitrite toxicity. |
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Term
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Definition
50% - 65% of total N fixed in soil. Rhizobium bacteria fix atmospheric nitrogen into available forms of nitrogen. Bacteria must be in a low-oxygen environment, including legume root nodules, where there is leghemoglobin. The presence of root nodules does not necessarily mean biological fixation is occuring. |
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Term
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Definition
aka Cyanobacteria
Autotrophic algae. Contain chlorophyll and are capable of fixing N from the atmosphere. Cause eutrophication. Fix nitrogen at a rate of 25 kg/ha. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Breakdown of organic matter |
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Definition
A source of soil acidity. |
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Term
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Definition
A secondary macronutrient. The sixth most common element in the earth's crust. |
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Term
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Definition
How high up water will travel through a capillary (a narrow tube). As the tube gets wider, the capillary rise goes down according to the equatoin h = 0.15/r. The water rises due to adhesion and cohesion. Factors involved in finding this equation are air pressure, gravity, surface tension of water, and the density of water. |
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Term
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Definition
A macronutrient. Taken from the atmosphere. |
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Term
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Definition
Carbon goes from the atmosphere into plants, then into either the soil or animals. It eventually returns to the atmopshere. |
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Term
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Definition
The ratio between C and N atoms in organic matter. It determines if the nitrogen will mineralize or immobilize during decomposition.
Less than 30:1 and it will mineralize.
More than 30:1 and it will immobilize.
The C:N ratio of soil microbes is 8:1. Respiration accounts for 70% of the carbon being lost. |
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Term
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Definition
The maximum rate of consumption that flow resource can be subjected to without depleting it. This level can be increased through input of capital, energy, and technology. It is reduced if the rate of consumption is higher than the rate of regeneration. If consumption is greater than the carrying capacity, the resource behaves like a stock resource. |
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Term
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Definition
A test to determine soil texture. Moist soil is compressed in a clenched hand. The soil is then tossed from hand to hand to determine how well the soil holds together. |
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Term
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Definition
Cause decrease clay stability. Can cause landslides. In soil solution they are always in equilibrium with the cations on exchange sites. |
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Term
Cation exchange capacity (CEC) |
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Definition
The available surface area for ions to attach in a soil. Dependent on clay surface area, organic matter, and pH. It is a buffer; the bigger it is the less susceptible to pH change. |
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Term
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Definition
A form of irrigation where a boom rotates around a central water source. Field must be circular. Pipe is engineered to give more water at the end of the boom than near the centre. |
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Term
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Definition
A metal atom is surrounded by organic molecules, inproving micronutrient mobility and availability. Forms a high molecular weight orgnic matter complex. Improves handling characteristics of micronutrients, which is why chelates are used in fertilizers. No gunk is formed at the bottom of tanks. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
A 2:1:1 clay structure. Octahedral sheets are attached between adjacent 2:1 structures. Low shrink-swell potential. CEC is 20 - 40 cmole/kg. Surface area is 25 - 40 m2/g. |
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Term
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Definition
Tile drainage made from 30 cm long sections of clay piping. Has no preforations; water enters through the cracks between sections. Can last thousands of years in the soil. Must be below the frost level. |
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Term
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Definition
Fix nitrogen at a rate of 100 - 160 kg/ha. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
The attracting force between water molecules. It is a factor in capillary rise and matric potential. |
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Term
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Definition
Without conservation, a flow resource will provide a lot at first but over time decrease.
With conservation, a flow resrouce will provide the same level for all time.
Includes soil, water, and air conservation. Family-owned lands are more likely to practice conservation than rented lands. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
A factor of management in the USLE. Determined from a table of various crops and crop rotations. Erosion can be decreased by planting crops with low C values. |
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Term
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Definition
The formation of a hard crust on the surface of a dry soil. Bad for planting. Prevents water from infiltrating through the soil. |
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Term
Custom-blended fertilizer |
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Definition
Contains a specific combination of MAP, urea, and potash, according to the specific needs of a field. Decreases risk of over-application. |
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Term
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Definition
Soil samples of a standard dimension (not compacted) placed into a tube, and water poured on top. Measured how long it took for the water to pass through the soil. |
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Term
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Definition
Rate depends on type of organic matter, size of organic matter particles, amount of organic matter, mixing of the soil, temperature, moisture, oxygen, pH, and nutrient availability. Decomposition releases NH4, CO2, H2O, and other plant nutrients. |
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Term
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Definition
Appear only after a number of physiological processes have already occured. May be occuring due to some cause other than deficiency in the soil, such as root uptake problems. Not a completely accurate way to determine soil nutrient status, but the cheapest. |
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Term
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Definition
A nitrogen loss. Nitrate is converted into N2O or N2 by heterotrophic bacteria, often in anaerobic conditions. Rate of denitrification depends on oxygen level (faster when oxygen is limiting), levels of nitrates and organic nitrogen, temperature, and pH. It can lead to excessive nitrous oxide emissions.
NO3 -> NO2 -> NO -> N2O -> N2 |
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Term
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Definition
The fourth and final step of soil erosion, after transport. Particles falling out of suspension. In water erosion, it may occur in bays and harbours, filling in the water, requiring dredging. |
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Term
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Definition
A measurement of water similar to how they measure rainfall. If you took all the water out of the soil and had it sit above the soil, how deep would the water be. |
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Term
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Definition
A consequence of soil degradation. |
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Term
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Definition
The first step of soil erosion. Followed by entrainment. Particles separate from aggregates. |
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Term
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Definition
A heterotroph that eats dead plants. |
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Term
Direct measurement of water content |
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Definition
Sampling, weighing, and drying of soil in ovens. |
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Term
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Definition
A management technique to deal with excess water. Includes surface drainage and tile drainage. |
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Term
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Definition
There are 100 - 1700 kg of earthworms per hectare. Their burrowing improves porosity, aeration, and water flow. They mix organic matter. The slime they secrete stabilizes soil structures. Sometimes they are harvested for use as fish bait.
Earthworms are not native to Ontario, they were brought from Europe in potted plants. They cannot migrate quickly. |
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Term
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Definition
The second step of erosion, after detachment. Particles enter water or wind. Followed by transport. |
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Term
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Definition
A factor in soil water erosion. Texture, structure, and organic matter of soil. It is factor K in the USLE equation. Determined from a textural triangle or a table of textural classes.
The B and C horizons are more erodable, so when erosionr reaches the B horizon the rate of erosion speeds up. |
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Term
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Definition
A form of soil degradation. Includes water, wind, and tillage on a slope. First particles have detatchment, then entrainment, then transport, and deposition. Silt is more susceptible to erosion; clay forms strong aggregates and sand particles are too big. Once erosion reaches the B horizon, the rate of erosion speeds up because the soil is more erodable. |
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Term
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Definition
The sum of evaporation and transpiration. Part of the equation for water budget. |
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Term
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Definition
More likely to practice resource conservation techniques. |
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Term
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Definition
A test to determine soil texture. Determines approximate sand content. Soil is rubbed in the palm of the hand, allowing coarser sand particles to fall out |
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Term
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Definition
Applied until the marginal income of additional yield is equl to the marginal expense of added fertilizers. Application may not be an option because of the developmental stage of the crop. |
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Term
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Definition
A rule that the fertilizer grade labelled on a fertilizer must be at least correct. It can overestimate, but not underestimate. |
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Term
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Definition
The percentage by weight of nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium respectively
N-P-K |
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Term
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Definition
Ψm = -0.3 on a water retention curve. The soil water content when free drainage is stopped. With added organic matter, there is a large increase in the water content at this point. |
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Term
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Definition
A form of irrigation where the whole field is flooded. Requires a flat field. Used in rice production. My be used prior to planting. Trench and dyke systems. Cheap, but labour intensive. |
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Term
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Definition
aka Renewable resource
A resource that is not depleted when used, provided that the rate of consumption is no greater than the rate of regeneration. Has a carrying capacity. |
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Term
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Definition
A type of microflora. There are 104 to 105 fungi in a gram of soil; 10 - 500 kg/ha. Decompose organic matter. Stabilize soil structure. May be in mycorrhizae relationships with plants. |
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Term
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Definition
A heterotroph that eats fungi. |
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Term
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Definition
A landform created by a glacier. Includes terminal moraines and ground moraines. |
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Term
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Definition
A remedial measure for water erosion. Permanent grass cover over areas that otherwise form gullies. Engineered to conduct water. Relatively easy to build. Difficult to drive equipment to avoid it. Especially when spraying herbicide, it is easy to accidentally kill the grass. |
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Term
Gravitational potential (Ψg) |
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Definition
Energy status based on height in relation to a reference point. Positive when above the reference point, negative when below the reference point. Measured with a meter stick. |
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Term
Ground penetrating radar (GPR) |
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Definition
An in situ method of determining soil water content. Measures the density of the soil. Can only penetrate to a certain depth. |
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Term
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Definition
A tube with air inlet tubes. Creates a constant depth of water in the soil. |
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Term
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Definition
Water erosion that forms gullies. Very easy to see. Gullies must be filled in, and are often eroded again. It may be cheaper to build a grass or stone waterway in these areas. |
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Term
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Definition
A form of irrigation. Water is shot at high speeds over a field. Guns are fixed or run across a field. Need to be supervised. If it gets stuck it will irrigate one area for too long. Manure used to be applied this way, but that practice was banned. |
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Term
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Definition
A processs in which atmospheric nitrogen is converted into ammonia. Atmospheric nitrogen and hydrogen gas are mixed with a catalyst at high pressure and temperature. Without this process, we would not be able to fee the world's population. Because fuel is needed for this process, as fuel prices rise so do fertilizer prices. |
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Term
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Definition
A region in the textural triangle. |
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Term
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Definition
A heterotroph that eats living plants. |
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Term
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Definition
A soil organism that obtains carbon from organic materials. Energy is derived from oxidation of carbon in organic materials. Includes herbivores, detritivore, predators, fungivores, bacterivores, and parasites. Play a part in mineralization of organic matter. |
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Term
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Definition
Perform denitrification, especially in anaerobic environmens. |
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Term
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Definition
The bucket has a number of holes in it and a tap is filling the bucket at a certain rate. The water level in the bucket always reaches an equilibrium that depends on the rate of the tap and the size, number, and height of the holes.
Organic matter levels in the soil reach equilibrium like this. The tap represents organic matter input, and the holes represent organic matter removal and decomposition. |
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Term
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Definition
The sum of gravitational potential, matric potential and pressure potential.
Ψh = Ψg + Ψm + Ψp |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
aka The water cycle
Includes runoff, infiltration, percolation, evaporation, transpiration, and precipitation. |
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Term
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Definition
Fungi "roots". Much smaller than root hairs and can enter pores that root hairs would not be able to fit. |
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Term
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Definition
Frozen water. The hydrogen bond cause the molecules to form a crystalized shape that is less dense than liquid water. Can clog up pores, causing decreased water drainage in the spring. |
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Term
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Definition
A 2:1 clay structure. A silica tetrahedron sheet bonds to both sides of an octahedron sheet. Has no charge. The sheets are then held together with potassium ions. These ions are stuck in the structure. Low shrink-swell potentiall. Over time in the soil, the interlayer spaces are weathered apart, turning into smectite or vermiculite.
CEC is 20 - 40 cmol/ha.
Surface area is 100 - 200 m2/g.
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Term
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Definition
When the amount of organic N is less than the requirements of soil organisms. Inorganic N is absorbed from the soil solution for decomposition. Plant available N is reduced. Organic matter has a C:N greater than 30:1. |
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Term
In situ measurement of water content |
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Definition
Includes neutron probes, TDR, and GPR. |
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Term
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Definition
A management technique to deal with water deficiency. Includes flood, sprinker, trickle, gun, lateral move, and center pivot irrigation. Permission from the ministry of the environment is needed before irrigating. |
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Term
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Definition
Replacing one element with another. |
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Term
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Definition
In La Baie, Quebec, there was a landslide caused by leda clay soils There was a large rainfall event, and houses washed out into the bay! |
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Term
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Definition
A form of irrigation where a boom moves across a field, spreading water. Good for rectangular fields. Not much water loss. |
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Term
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Definition
A nitrogen loss. Nitrates are carried into the water table. Dependent on NO3 concentration and water movement. If nitrate levels are over 10 ppm, water can lead to problems such as methemoglobinemia. |
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Term
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Definition
aka Quick clays
Clays high in sodium. Very susceptible to erosion when wet. They dissolve in water. They were the cause of the landslide in La Baie, Quebec. |
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Term
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Definition
A chemical that provides oxygen to rhizobium bacteria living in root nodules. It is red, making it appear that broken root nodules are "bleeding". |
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Term
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Definition
Fixes nitrogen at a rate of 40 - 80 kg/ha. |
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Term
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Definition
Can fix atmospheric nitrogen into plant usable forms. The amount of N added to the soil in this way is extremely small. |
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Term
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Definition
A region in the textural triangle. It has the lowest water retention curve. |
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Term
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Definition
Heterotrophic soil organisms larger than 2 mm in sie. Includes vertebrates, arthropods, annelida, and mollusca. |
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Term
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Definition
Autotrophic soil organisms including plants and mosses. Autotrophic. |
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Term
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Definition
A nutrient needed in large quantities.
Includes C, H, O, N, P, and K. And the secondary nutrients, Ca, Mg, and S. |
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Term
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Definition
A secondary macronutrient. The fifth most common element in the earth's crust. |
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Term
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Definition
A factor in the USLE equation. Determined from a table with various management practices including tillage and ground cover. Erosion can be decrased by adopting management practices with lower a P value. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Has a C:N ratio of 20:1. A source of organic nutrients. If impropery stored, transferred, or applied, it can lead to ammonia volatilization. |
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Term
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Definition
The mass of water in the soil. Mass of water divided by the mass of soil. |
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Term
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Definition
The energy status based on the forces of adhesion and cohesion. It is zero in saturated soils, and negative in unsaturated soils. Below the water table, it is zero. Measured with a tensiometer. |
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Term
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Definition
The lens-like dip water makes at the top of a capillary. Adhesion puls water up around the walls of the capillary. |
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Term
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Definition
Heterotrophic soil organisms between 0.2 and 2 mm in size. Includes mites. |
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Term
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Definition
aka Blue baby syndrome.
A disease caused by high nitrogen in water caused by leaching. |
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Term
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Definition
Heterotrophic soil organisms less than 0.2 mm in size. Includes nematodes, protozoa, and actinomycetes. |
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Term
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Definition
Autotrophic soil organisms less than 0.2 mm in size. Includes algae and fungi. |
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Term
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Definition
Needed in small amounts. Includes Fe, Mn, B, Cu, Zn, Cl, Co, Ni, and Se. |
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Term
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Definition
aka Mobilization
The main source of inorgnic N in the soil. Decomposition of organic matter by heterotrophic organisms. Creates NH4, CO2, H2O, and other plant nutrients. Nitrogen in excess of the organism's needs is excreted in these forms. OM must have a C:N ratio less than 30:1. Organic phosphorus is turned into H2PO4-, HPO4-2, and PO4-3. |
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Term
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Definition
A type of mesofauna. Small arthropods. |
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Term
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Definition
10-10-10
A phosphorus fertilizer made by mixing sulfuric acid, rock, phosphate, ammonia, and heat. Costs $0.34/kg. Can lead to overapplication problems. |
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Term
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Definition
Completely flips the soil over. |
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Term
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Definition
A type of macrofauna. Includes slugs and snails. |
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Term
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Definition
|
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Term
Mon-Ammonium Phosphate (MAP) |
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Definition
11-52-0
A phosphorus feritlizer made by mixing rock phosphate, sulfuric acid, ammonia, and heat. Costs $0.70/kg. The safest fertilizer in terms of safety and seed injury. |
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Term
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Definition
KCl
aka Potassium chloride
0-0-60
Costs $0.58/kg. The purified form of potash ore. The form of potassium in most ferilizers. Can be processed into potassium sulphate and potassium nitrate. |
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Term
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Definition
A symbiotic relationship between plants and fungi that improves uptake of phosphorus. Roots are infected with fungus and trades sugars for phosphorus. The hyphae of the fungi increase the volume of soil that is mined for phosphorus. The hyphae mine pores that the plant's root hairs would be too large to enter. The pont of contact between plant and fungi is the arbuscule. |
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Term
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Definition
A type of microfauna. There are more than 500,000 species. They are ubiqutous to all soils. |
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Term
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Definition
An in situ method of measuring water content. A detector with a neutron source is put in the soil. The neutrons bounce around and return to a dector, which measures their speed. Water slows neutrons. A very accurate method of measurement, but it is highly radioactive. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
NO3-
An anion. Has a small molecular radius. Cannot attach to exchange sites; instead it stays in the soil solution. Very susceptible to leaching. A form of nitrogen available to plants. |
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Term
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Definition
HNO3
Made by combining ammonia and O2 at high temperatures. Corrodes equipment. |
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Term
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Definition
The conversion of NH4 into NO2 then into NO3. Done by autotrophic bacteria. Produces H+. The first half of the process is done by nitrosomonas, and the second half by nitrobacter. The rate of nitrification depends on temperature, oxygn, water pH, and availability of NH4+. |
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Term
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Definition
Generally absent in the soil because it turns into nitrate. In high pH soils, the conversion is reduced. Can cause toxicity. |
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Term
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Definition
An autotrphic bacteria that performs the second step in nitrification.
NO2- + ½ O2 -> NO3- + Energy |
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Term
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Definition
A macronutrient. Used for chlorophyll formation, photosynthesis, and synthesis of proteins. Mobile within a plant. |
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Term
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Definition
Nitrogen enters the sol from the atmosphere through biological fication, deposition, or the Haber process. It leaves the soil through leaching, denitrification, or harvest of plants/animals. |
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Term
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Definition
Yellowing of older leaves. Eventually, necrosis of the leaf starting at leaf tips. In legumes, it could signify a nodulation problem. |
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Term
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Definition
Includes urea, anhydrous ammonia, UAN, ammonium nitrate, and sulphur coated urea. Needed when the natural rate of mineralization of organic nitrogen is less than the peak needs of the crop. Too much and plants may over-elongate and fall over. |
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Term
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Definition
The enzyme present in rhizobium bacteria that allows it to fix nitrogen. |
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Term
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Definition
An autotrophic bacteria that performs the first step in nitrification.
NH4+ + O2 -> NO2- + H+ + Energy |
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Term
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Definition
N2O
A greenhouse gas. It is released during denitrification. 50% - 80% of the increase in nitrous oxide emissions are due to agriculture. |
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Term
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Definition
Have a C:N ratio of 65:1. |
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Term
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Definition
A sheet of aluminium octahedrons. The OH- groups are shared covalently, so there is zero charge. There are exposed OH- groups on both sides of the sheet. Isomorphic substitution results in charge. |
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Term
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Definition
Energy status based on dissolved solutes in the water. The higher the ion concentration, the more negative. More important to root water uptake than to soil water potential. Not included in calculations for hydraulic potential. Measured by electrical conductivity. |
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Term
Over-application of fertilizer |
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Definition
Happens when using a pre-blended mix of fertilizers. Applies the correct amount for some nutrients, but too much of others. Can cause leaching, toxicity, and wastes money. |
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Term
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Definition
A macronutrient. The most common element in the earth's crust. |
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Term
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Definition
A heterotrph that survives off of another organism. |
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Term
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Definition
aka Ground water outflow
Water running away underground. Part of the equation for water budget. |
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Term
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Definition
Charges in the soil due to isomorphic substitution in clays. |
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Term
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Definition
Charges in the soil due to the surface area of clay. |
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Term
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Definition
Phosphorus leaves the soil as harvested matter and leaching. Replenished with fertilizers. Exists in the soil as H2PO4-, HPO4-, and PO4- Has precipitates of Ca, Fe, and Al. |
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Term
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Definition
Purple colour in older leaes. Dark green colour. Slower growth, delayed maturity. Often occurs in early stages of plant growth because younger plants mine a smaller volume of soil for phosphorus. Some corn hybrids naturally are purple in early stages, but it is not a phosphorus deficiency. |
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Term
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Definition
A device used to measure the depth of the water table. An electrode is dropped on a string down a long pipe in the ground. The electrode buzzes when it hits the water and the string is measured. |
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Term
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Definition
Has a C:N ratio fo 225:1. |
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Term
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Definition
A source of organic nutrients. Slows down the speed of water, decrasing erosion. |
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Term
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Definition
Tells what nutrients the plant is taking up from the soil. More effective for perennial species. Bad areas as well as good areas should be sampled. |
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Term
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Definition
Tile drainage made from 30 m long sections of perforated plastic tubing. Eventually it deteriorates, but can stay in the soil for a long time. |
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Term
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Definition
Found in a huge area 1 km underground in Saskatchewan. Contains sand, clay, potassium chloride, and sodium chloride. It is purified into muriate of potash. Sand is removed with wter. Sodium chloride is removed by heating and removing the crystals.
The name comes from when they used to put ash in a pot and boil it. |
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Term
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Definition
A macronutrient. The eight most common element in the earth's crust. Mobile within a plant. Used in the synthesis of proteins, carbohydrates, chlorophyll, transolation of carbohydrtes, and stomata opening and closing. Not a component of any biochemical, just a solute. Mined as potash ore. It attaches to exchange sites on clay, becoming unavailable. There are no environmental issues with potassium erosion. |
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Term
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Definition
More common in prennials. Necrosis of older leaves starting at leaf tips and margins. Weaker stalks causing lodging, and slower growth. |
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Term
Potassium magnesium sulfate |
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Definition
K2SO4MgSO4
0-0-22
A potassium fertilizer. |
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Term
|
Definition
KNO2
14-0-41
A potassium fertilizer made by mixing potassium chloride with nitric acid. |
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Term
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Definition
K2SO4
0-0-50
A potassium fertilizer made by mixing potassium chloride with sulfuric acid. Slightly more expensive than potassium chloride. |
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Term
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Definition
This crop has a high cropping practice C value. Every stage of production involves tillage including planting, mound raising, and harvest. |
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Term
Potential evapotranspiration (PET) |
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Definition
The amount of water that could be lost through evapotranspiration if the water was always never limiting. Factors involved in estimating it are temperature and amount and duration of solar radiation. |
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Term
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Definition
Water condensing out of the air and falling to the earth. Part of the equation for water budget. |
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Term
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Definition
A heterotroph that eats animals. |
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Term
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Definition
Energy status based on the pressure of overlaying water. Above the water table, it is zero. Below the water table it is positive. Measured with a piezometer. |
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Term
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Definition
A type of microfauna. There are 10 - 100 in a gram of soil; 10 - 150 kg/ha. |
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Term
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Definition
Measures the amount of radiation from the sun. |
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Term
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Definition
A source of soil acidity. Water in the atmosphere reacts with CO2 in the atmosphere, forming HCO3- and H+. The pH of rain is about 5.6. A factor in water erosion. Characteristics are intensity and duration. It is factor R in the USLE equation. Determined from a table with various world locations. |
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Term
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Definition
Less likely practice resource conservation techniques. |
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Term
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Definition
Forms a host-specific infection in legume plant roots. If growing a crop for the first time, it is unlikely the specific species needed will be in the soil, so they must be added. Once resent in the soil they are difficult to remove. Convert atmospheric nitrogen into availble forms of nitrogen. Have the enyme nitrogenase. The bacteria need a small amount of oxygen, which is provided by leghemoglobin. Do not survive in high pH soils. |
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Term
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Definition
A test to determine soil texture. Moist soil is rolled into a pencil shape and then squeezed between the thumb and finger to form a ribbon. Measure how long the ribbon can get before breaking. |
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Term
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Definition
The form that phosphorus is found in phosphorus deposits. Low plant availability. Can be processed into superphosphates, mixed fertilizer, ammonium phosphate, and triple superphosphate. |
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Term
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Definition
A remedial measure for water erosion. A ditch with rocks and stones in it. Slows down the water and stabilizes the ditch. Equipment cannot drive over it. |
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Term
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Definition
A beneficial infection in legume roots where rhizobium bacteria perform biological nitrogen fixation. Contains leghemoglobin to supply the bacteria with oxygen. |
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Term
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Definition
Water that runs over the top of the soil. Can cause water erosion. Part of the equation for water budget. |
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Term
|
Definition
A form of soil degradation. |
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Term
|
Definition
A region in the textural triangle. |
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Term
|
Definition
A region in the textural triangle. |
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Term
|
Definition
A region in the textural triangle. Feels grainy. Forms a weak caste. Barely ribbons. |
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Term
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Definition
Has a C:N ratio of 400:1. |
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Term
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Definition
For a period in the summer each year, ET is greater than available water. |
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Term
|
Definition
Ca, Mg, and S. Macronutrients. |
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Term
|
Definition
A micronutrient. Plants don't need this element, but animals do, so it must be incorporated into the plant. |
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Term
|
Definition
A source of organic nutrients. |
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Term
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Definition
Water erosion that takes a small amount of soil off of the surface all across a field. Hard to see. The surface of the soil will look "polished". Lose more soil from sheet erosion than from gully erosion. |
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Term
|
Definition
A test to determine soil texture. Soil is rolled into a ball and a knife blade rubbed against it. The shininess of the soil is observed. |
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Term
|
Definition
SO4
A silicon atom with 4 oxygen atoms bonded to it in a tetrahedron shape. has a -4 charge. The building block of clay. Forms a silica tetrahedron sheet. |
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Term
|
Definition
A sheet of silica tetrahedrons. The oxygens are shared covalently, so it has no charge. There are exposed oxygens on one side of the sheet. Some isomorphic substitutions of aluminum in the place of the silicon result in a slightly negative charge. |
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Term
|
Definition
The second most common element in the earth's crust. |
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Term
|
Definition
A glaciolacustrine landform. Formed from stillwater lakes. Silt and clay settled out of the water and formed flat areas high in silt and clay. |
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Term
|
Definition
A region in the textural triangle. Has the highest water retention curve. |
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Term
|
Definition
A region in the textural triangle. |
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Term
|
Definition
When a soil is rapidly wetted, the air-filled pores inside the aggregates are under high pressure. They explode if the aggregate stability is not enough to hold this pressure. The aggregate shatters if this happens. |
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Term
|
Definition
A mollusca soil organism. In Ontario they are small and grey. In BC they are huge and brightly coloured. |
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Term
|
Definition
Mesofauna that include mites. |
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Term
|
Definition
Slows down wind, and snow drops out of suspension, forming a mound of snow. |
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Term
|
Definition
Includes structure, erosion, loss of organic matter, salinization, compaction, and acidification. Results in desertificatoin. Reduction in carrying capacity, environmetnal degradation, and costs to producers and to society. In North America the most common form is water degradation, and the most common cause is agriculture. |
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Term
|
Definition
Tells what nutrients are in the soil, not what plants are taking up. Unreliable. Often gives misinformation. |
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Term
|
Definition
A device for emergency water in the desert.
1. Dig a pit
2. Put a container at the bottom of the pit
3. Put some living plant matter in the pit
4. Cover the pit with clear plastic and secure the edges
5. Place a smal rock on the plastic in the centre, so that the plastic slopes downward like a cone.
Water from with evapotranspirate from the soil into the air inside the pit. The air in the pit will be very hot, due to the greenhous effect, so the water will condense on the plastic, then slide down and drip into the container. |
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Term
|
Definition
Fix nitrogen at a rate of 60 - 100 kg/ha. Unlike other nitrogen-fixing plants, soybeans exchange carbon and nitrogen with rhizobium bacteria in a 1:1 ratio (other plants exchange more carbons per nitrogen). |
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Term
|
Definition
In the spring there is ice in the macropores of the soil, causing pore drainage. Surface vegetation is still minimal. This leads to water erosion. |
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Term
|
Definition
A form of irrigation. Water is sprinkled. Good for small areas such as gardens and lawns. A lot of water is lost as mist.. |
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Term
|
Definition
The water potential of pure water with no solutes at atmospheric temperature at soil temperature. |
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Term
|
Definition
Non-renewable resources. Exist in finite quantities and are depleted when used. |
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Term
|
Definition
aka Non-renewable resource
Exist in finite quantities and are depleted when used. |
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Term
|
Definition
Intercropping in strips. Reduces erosion. Difficult to implement if the slope is not uniform. |
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Term
|
Definition
A seconary macronutrient. |
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Term
|
Definition
A nitrogen fertilizer. Urea with a sulphur coat. 35% nitrogen. |
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Term
|
Definition
In the summer there are intense thunder storms, but not much water erosion because by this point there is usually engough vegetation |
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Term
|
Definition
0-20-0
A phosphorus fertilizer created by mixing rock phohpsate and sulfuric acid. |
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Term
|
Definition
A ditch or permanently grassed area in a field for the purpose of drainage. Field must have a constant slope. Popular in areas that get a lot of snow. |
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Term
|
Definition
A factor effecting rate of decomposition. Organisms prefer a specific range of temperatures for decomposition. |
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Term
|
Definition
A device that measures matric potential. A tube with water in it. The end has a porous ceramic cap. When inserted into thesoil, the pressure in the tube is measured, giving matric potential. |
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Term
|
Definition
A glacial landform. A stationary glacier dumping debris. Forms a large hill with a mix of boulders, stones, sand, silt, and clay. |
|
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Term
|
Definition
A form of erosion. No matter which direction you drive on a slope, the act of tillage causes some of the soil to shift downwards on the slop. |
|
|
Term
Time domain reflectometry (TDR) |
|
Definition
An in situ mehtod of measuring water content. Generates electromagnetic waves and measures how much energy is removed from them by the soil. This technology is also used to locate breaks in cables. |
|
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Term
|
Definition
The sum of gravitational potential, matric potential, osmotic potential, and pressure potential. |
|
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Term
|
Definition
Water leaving through plant pores. Corn loses 40,000 L/ha*day. Birch trees lose 300 L/tree*day. Part of the equation for evapotranspiration. |
|
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Term
|
Definition
The third step of soil erosion, after entrainment. Followed by deposition. |
|
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Term
|
Definition
A form of irrigation where drip tape is run through the whole field and there is a hole for every plant. Saves water. Fertiliers can be added to the water. Very expensive to set up. |
|
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Term
|
Definition
0-46-0
A phosphorus fertilizer made by mixing rock phosphate, sulfuric acid, and heat. Has more P by weight than super phosphate. |
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28-0-0
A nitrogen fertilizer. A mixture: 50% urea, 50% ammonium nitrate. |
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Universal Soil Loss Equation (USLE) |
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A = R*K*LS*C*P
An equation that calculates the amount of water erosion. The factors LS, C, and P can be altered to decrease erosion. |
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CO(NH2)2
46-0-0
A nitrogen fertilizer. Costs $0.59/kg. Made by combining ammonia and CO2 at high pressures. A component of UAN. If applied to soil sthat have high pH, low buffer capacity, are hot or dry, or if not incorporated correctly, urea can lead to ammonia volatilization. |
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A nitrogen loss. Rate is high in higher pH soils.
CO(NH2)2 + 2 H2O -> (NH4)2CO3 + H+ -> 2 NH4 + H2O + CO2 |
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A 2:1 clay structure. A silica tetrahedron sheet bonds to both sides of an octahedron sheet. Ions attach to the sides of the silica tetrahedron sheets, pushing individual sheets apart. High shrink-swell potential.
CEC is 100 - 150 cmole/kg.
Surface area is 300 - 500 m2/g. |
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Macrofauna that include groundhogs. |
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Volumetric water content (θv) |
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The water content of the soil by volume. The volume of water divided by the volume of soil. |
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H2O
Melting point is 0°C. Boiling point is 100°C. Its molecular mass is 18. It is a polar molecule and forms hydrogen bonds. |
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ΔS = P - ET - R1 - R2
Changes with soil type and climate. |
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Mass water content, volumetric water content, or depth equivalent. Can be measured directly or in situ. |
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Includes sheet erosion and gully erosion. Factors include rainfall, soil erodability, topography, and management. Remedial measures include ground cover, cover crops, crop residue, reduced tillage, manipulation of slopes, planting perpendicular to slope, grass waterways, and stone waterways. Calculated using the USLE. |
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Jw = -k(ΔΨh/Δz)
This equation was determined by Darcy's experiment. Z is the depth of the soil. |
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The energy status of water and its ability to do work, relative to a reference point at standard potential. If water potential (total or hydraulic) varies int he soil, water will travel until the water potential is equal everywhere. |
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97% of water is in the oceans
2% is in the ice caps
0.7% is groundwater
0.05% is surface freshwater |
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A graph showing the relation between the water content of a soil and its matric potential. |
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Weathering of soil minerals |
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A source of soil acidity. Water reacts with Al+3, producing AlOH+2, and H+. |
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Ψm = -15 on a water retention curve.
Soil water content where most plants become permanently wilted. With added organic matter, there is a small increase in the water content at this point. |
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Erosion caused by the wind. Caused by fast winds, fine soil texture, low water content, little ground cover, and smooth surfaced soil. Crops are sandblasted. Remedial measures include ground cover and windbreaks. |
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A remedial measure for wind erosion. Slows down the wind, causing particles to fall out of suspension. Includes trees. |
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