Soil Formation: Key Vocabulary

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Vocabulary flashcards covering factors influencing soil formation, categories of parent materials, weathering rates, and stages of soil development.

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30 Terms

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Regolith

Unconsolidated, weathered debris that overlies bedrock; its upper portion can develop into soil.

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Parent Material

The upper regolith providing minerals and texture for soil development, directly influenced by soil-forming factors.

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Residual (Sedentary) Parent Material

Soil parent material formed in place from the weathering of underlying bedrock.

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Transported Parent Material

Unconsolidated material moved from its source by water, gravity, wind, ice, or waves before soil formation.

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Alluvial Deposit

Parent material transported and laid down by rivers or streams.

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Colluvial Deposit

Coarse gravel or rock fragments moved downslope by gravity.

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Eolian Deposit

Fine clay, silt, or sand carried and deposited by wind.

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Lacustrine Deposit

Sediments deposited in lake bottoms that later become parent material.

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Marine Deposit

Materials laid down on sea or ocean floors and later uplifted to form soils.

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Glacial Deposit

Parent material transported and dropped by moving or melting ice.

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Climate (Active Soil-Forming Factor)

Combination of temperature and precipitation that strongly controls weathering, organic matter production, and soil development.

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Temperature Effect

Increased heat speeds expansion–contraction cracking and boosts organic matter production where moisture is adequate.

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Precipitation Effect

Higher rainfall accelerates chemical weathering, leaching, and plant growth—provided temperatures permit vegetation.

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Relief / Topography

Landscape position; slopes lose water and soil by runoff/erosion, while lower areas receive water, favoring deeper soils.

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Run-Off

Water flowing off slopes that removes soil and slows profile development.

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Biotic Factor

Influence of vegetation, microorganisms, and animals that produce acids, mix soil, and enhance infiltration.

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Earthworm Activity

Burrowing by worms increases aeration and water entry, hastening soil formation.

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Time Factor

Duration over which other factors act; older soils show more weathering, clay accumulation, and mineral alteration.

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Embryonic Soil

Initial stage consisting mainly of fresh parent material (C horizon) with minimal profile development.

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Young Soil

Profile displaying an A horizon over C horizon; clay formation has just begun.

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Old Soil

Weathered profile rich in clay, dominated by 1:1 clays and sesquioxides; most easily weathered minerals removed.

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Very Old Soil

Highly weathered profile where clay (<0.002 mm) dominates and soil-forming processes have nearly ceased.

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Sesquioxides

Oxides of iron and aluminum that accumulate in old, intensely weathered soils.

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1:1 Clay Minerals

Clays such as kaolinite with one silica sheet per alumina sheet, common in highly weathered soils.

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2:1 Clay Minerals

Clays like smectite and illite with two silica sheets per alumina sheet, more common in less-weathered soils.

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Quartz Fertility Status

SiO₂ mineral contributes virtually no plant nutrients to soil fertility.

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Biotite Contribution

K(Mg,Fe)₃AlSi₃O₁₀(OH)₂ mica supplying potassium, magnesium, and iron to soil.

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Sandstone Weathering Rate

Weakly cemented sandstone can disintegrate 1 cm in roughly 10 years under humid conditions.

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Quartzite Weathering Rate

Metamorphosed sandstone weathers so slowly that products are usually removed before soil can form.

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Limestone Residue Formation

In humid regions it may take about 100,000 years to produce 30 cm (1 ft) of weathered residue.