1 / 31

LAND & SOIL USES

LAND & SOIL USES. Sydney Rasp and Jessie Dressler Seneca Valley Senior High School. Soil Surveys. Soils are grouped by similar properties and behaviors Named for a town, landmark or feature Example: Titusville Series Has a description of each soil series

ronna
Download Presentation

LAND & SOIL USES

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. LAND & SOIL USES Sydney Rasp and Jessie Dressler Seneca Valley Senior High School

  2. Soil Surveys • Soils are grouped by similar properties and behaviors • Named for a town, landmark or feature • Example: Titusville Series • Has a description of each soil series • Each description has information about that series and a description of the soil profile

  3. Soil Survey Map Index • Every soil survey has a map index of the listed county • Has the location of major towns, state highways and some country roads

  4. The Soil Map • Aerial photograph • Also shows main land types and roads • Town names and municipal boundaries are shown to pinpoint the exact location of a property • Have boundaries of soil series

  5. Types of Butler Co. Soil Series • Hazleton Channery Loam • Hazleton Loam • Hazleton and Gilpin Soils • Monongahela Silt Loam • Philo Loam • Pits, Sand and gravel • Pope Loam • Riverhead Sandy Loam • Tilsit Silt Loam • Titusville Silt Loam • Titusville and Riverhead Soils • Udorthents, Acid Material, Gently Sloping • Udorthents, Acid Material, Moderately Steep • Udorthents, Acid Material, Very Steep • Udorthents, Calcareous Material, Moderately Steep • Udorthents, Calcareous Material, Very Steep • Urban land- Ernest Complex • Urban land- Gilpin Complex • Vandergrift- Cavode Silt Loams • Wharton Silt Loam • Wheeling Silt Loam • Andover Loam • Arents-Urban Land Complex • Atkins Silt Loam • Braceville Loam • Brinkerton Silt Loam • Buchanan Loam • Canadice Silty Clay Loam • Caneadea Silt Loam • Cavode Silt Loam • Clymer Loam • Cookport Loam • Dumps, Industrial Waste • Dumps, Mines • Ernest Silt Loam • Fluvaquents, Coal Overwash • Fredon Loam • Frenchtown Silt Loam • Gilpin Silt Loam • Gilpin Channery Silt Loam • Gilpin-Upshur Complex • Gilpin-Weikert Channery Silt Loam • Gilpin-Wharton Silt Loam • Gilpin-Wharton Complex • Gresham Silt Loam

  6. Example:

  7. Soil Properties • There are other additional information within the engineering properties and other charts • All of these properties are needed when planning development of a piece of land • Also contains information on limitations for septic tanks, basements and roadways • It allows one to determine: • Depth to seasonal high water tables • Depths to bedrock • Land use limiting factors

  8. Vocabulary! • Alluvial Fan- low outspread mass of soil and/or rock deposited by a stream shaped like an open fan (triangle) or cone. Commonly found at the mouth of streams where they enter a larger valley. • Bench- a nearly level to gently sloping platform generally a bedrock controlled erosional surface on a mountainside or hillside.

  9. Vocabulary! • Bog- A waterlogged swampy area consisting of mostly organic material, such as mosses, sphagnum, sedges and woody materials. • Colluvium- soil material that has accumulated at a footslope of a ridge or mountain side to due to mass soil movement or landslide. • Depression- a relatively sunken part of the Earth’s surface. A low lying area surrounded by higher ground, such as a sinkhole.

  10. Vocabulary! • Drainageway- a general term used to describe a long narrow water course that at sometime has concentrated water flow, but lacks a channel or has a small defined channel. Water flow intermittent. • Drift(glacial)- a general term applied to all material transported and deposited by glacial ice. The term applies to deposits that no longer contains glaciers • Flood Plain- a near plain that boarders a stream and is subject to flooding. Soil material has been deposited by stream overflow and deposition.

  11. Vocabulary! • Footslope- a gentle to moderate sloping area at the base of a side slope or mountain slope . • Head slope- a concave surface at the end of a drainageway • Interfluve- a broad upland area or ridge top between two valleys or waterways that sheds water into those valleys or water ways

  12. Vocabulary! • Karst- topography with sink holes and under ground drainage formed in limestone, general has few if any streams except those formed by large springs. • Local Alluvium- soil deposited in drainage ways and on footslopes by sheet, rill, and gully erosion of adjacent and nearby slopes created by storm runoff rather than by overflowing streams • Loess- soil material transported and deposited by wind and predominately of silt size

  13. Vocabulary! • Mountain- the natural land rising more than 1000ft above the low lands • Mountain slope- the side slope of a mountain between summit and the foot • Nose slope- the projecting end of a interfluve generally convex contours up and down slope • Piedmont- in the United States the piedmont is a low plateau extending from New Jersey thru Pennsylvania to Alabama and lying east of the Appalachian

  14. Vocabulary! • Plateau- a relatively large flat area at high elevations near the summit and general 330ft above adjacent low lying areas • Residuum- unconsolidated weathered or partly weathered soil material that accumulates in place by disintegration of bedrock • Side Slope- a slope between a drainage way and summit or interfluve • Sinkhole- a closed depression formed in limestone by solution of the bedrock and formed by the collapse of the overlying soil

  15. Vocabulary! • Stream Terrace- A platform in a stream valley parallel to the stream representing an abandoned flood plain at higher elevation than current day flood plans • Summit- the topographically highest position with a plain to convex nearly level to the sloping surface • Upland- a general term for higher ground in contrast to valley, flood plain, or other low lying ground • Valley- an elongated relatively large external drained depression of the Earth primarily formed between mountains by erosion or glacial activity

  16. Soil Structure • The structure is a naturally occurring arrangement of soil particles in the aggregated that result from the soil forming process • The structure is described in three terms • Grade • Size • Shape

  17. Soil Structure: Grade • Structureless- no units observable in a hand sample or close observation • Sand is an example “structureless single grain” soil where the individual grains area loose and don’t form aggregates • “Structureless massive” is a continuous layers of soil that do not show aggregates in place or in a hand sample • Dense glacial till and the interior of some fragipans are massive single unit showing no development

  18. Soil Structure: Grade cont. • Weak- structural units are barely observable in place or in hand sample • Moderate- units are well formed and evident in place or in a hand sample • Strong- units are distinct and separate easily when disturbed

  19. Soil Structure: Size

  20. Soil Structure: Shape • Granular- the individual unites are approximately spherical or polyhedral and are curved or very irregular faces, common in surface horizons • Prismatic- units are elongated vertically with flat to rounded vertical surfaces, tops are general flat, common structure of fragipans • Subangular blocky- unites are somewhat rounded block like or with flat to slightly rounded polyhedral surfaces, common in subsurface horizons • Angular blocky- units are block like with sharp edges, common in heavy textured subsurface horizons • Platy- the units are flat and plate like and usual oriented horizontally, common in compacted surfaces and plough pans

  21. Soil Texture Pyramid

  22. Formation of Soils • Soil begins with solid rock • Forces of nature have turned rock into soils • Weathering- the natural process where rock is broken into smaller pieces • Heat and water help with the weathering process

  23. Composition of Soil • Made of 4 substances • 45% mineral particles • 5% organic matter • 50% air and water

  24. Soil Profile • Arrangement and properties of the various soil layers • Layers are: • Top soil- top layer, most nutrient rich • Sub soil- little or no organic matter is present • Parent material- lower layer from which the top and sub soils have developed

  25. Soil Classification • Soils are grouped according to: • agronomic use- ex: good wheat soil, poor corn soil • Color- ex: black soil, red soil • Organic Matter Content- ex: mineral soil, muck soil • Texture- ex: sandy, loam • Moisture Condition- ex: wet soil, dry soil

  26. Soil Management • There are 4 types: • Erosion • Conservation • Compaction • Drainage

  27. Erosion • Removal of soil material by wind or water moving over the land • Natural process and most hills and valleys are the product of water • 2 different types: • Sheetand rill- removal of top soil from a field; soil washes from field in thin layers or sheets from small channels or rills • Gully- deep ditches cut by flowing water

  28. Conservation • Preventing or stopping erosion • Best way to control erosion is to keep the soil covered • Done with living plants, or mulch of dead plant residue such as crop residue or dead leaves • Preparing the land for planting in a way that leaves crop residue on the soil surface is called conservation tillage

  29. Compaction • Current concern about soil compaction is in the top layer (plow layer) and in the sub soil because of damage to soil structure by soil compaction • Damage is caused by • Larger and heavier farm equipment • Increased specialization in crop production • Increased traffic and tillage necessary for application and incorporation of fertilizers, insecticides and herbicides • Earlier seed bed preparation and planting when soils are often wet and susceptible to compaction

  30. Water Relations • Size, shape and arrangement of the soil particles and pores determine the ability of a soil to retain water • Larger pores conduct more water more rapidly than smaller pores

More Related