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Atlas of soils and weathering

Soil, dirt, mud; weathering processes

Soils and weathering, the products of physical, chemical, and biological processes, produce a veneer on Earth’s crust that provides sustenance in one form or another for all land-air living creatures, including us.  Without soils there would be no food web. No us!

Homo sapiens has learned to use soil to her advantage; growing things to eat, to construct shelter, to decorate. We have learned to utilize soils to the hilt. In fact on a global basis we have  taken so little care of them that they have become an endangered species. In our haste to produce food, to irrigate, to scythe through forests, to clear land for some other use, we have damaged soils, in many cases beyond repair.  Humanity, in its ignorance, greed and hubris, has managed to seriously compromise the utility of soils – the very things that make life viable.

From a structural perspective soils are quite simple; there is topsoil that contains a mix of organic matter derived from plants, macro- and micro-organisms, plus minerals derived primarily from the underlying sediment or rock (parent material).  This structure is illustrated in the profile image above.

From a biological perspective, soils are complex. Apart from the obvious worms and small critters, there is a burgeoning microflora – fungi and bacteria; and it is the microflora that does most of the work to create a vital growing medium. The microflora breaks down fresh organic matter converting it to humus, and converts nutrients like nitrogen, potassium, phosphorous and many trace elements, into water-soluble forms that plants can metabolize. A vital topsoil requires a healthy microbiota. Soils that are regularly exposed to herbicides, bactericides and fungicides will, over time, become depauperate in useful microflora.

Classification of soils

Classification of soils can be complicated. In this Atlas I use a simple textural classification, summarized in the diagram below. It is a US Dept. of Agriculture classification; most other countries use this or slightly modified versions.

The images

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