The Natural Environment
The Natural Environment
The Natural Environment
Environment
SOILS: their effect on site planning
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Soil:
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Soil Formation:
Soil is formed slowly as rock (the parent material)
erodes into tiny pieces near the Earth's surface.
Organic matter decays and mixes with inorganic
material (rock particles, minerals and water) to form
soil
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Soil Profile
Soil is made up of distinct
horizontal layers; these
layers are called horizons.
They range from rich,
organic upper layers
(humus and topsoil) to
underlying rocky layers
( subsoil, regolith and
bedrock).
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SOIL LAYERS
O Horizon - The top, organic layer
of soil made up mostly of leaf litter
and humus (decomposed organic
matter).
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SOIL LAYERS
E Horizon - This eluviation
(leaching) layer is light in color;
this layer is beneath the A Horizon
and above the B Horizon. It is made
up mostly of sand and silt, having
lost most of its minerals and clay as
water drips through the soil (in the
process of eluviation).
B Horizon - Also called the subsoil this layer is beneath the E Horizon
and above the C Horizon. It contains
clay and mineral deposits (like iron,
aluminum oxides, and calcium
carbonate) that it receives from
layers above it when mineralized
water drips from the soil above.
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SOIL LAYERS
C Horizon - Also called regolith: the
layer beneath the B Horizon and
above the R Horizon. It consists of
slightly broken-up bedrock. Plant
roots do not penetrate into this layer;
very little organic material is found in
this layer.
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Types of Soil:
There are many different types of soils, and each one has
unique characteristics, like color, texture, structure, and
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Soil Texture
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Soil Texture
SILT
Silt is normally made up of very
small sand particles; it also
gives few nutrients to a soil, but
it makes a soil very dense and
often difficult to cultivate
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Soil Texture
CLAY
Clay results in soils rich in
nutrient although they too
can be difficult to work.
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Soil Texture
PEAT
Peat derives from
vegetables matter
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LOAMS
Loams are the mixed soils; they
are the easiest and most
productive to work for
agriculture.
The different components do
much to determine the
availability of the nutrients to the
plants.
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SOIL
ACIDITY
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SOIL
FERTILITY
SOIL EROSION
Erosionis the process by which the topsoil is
washed away.The topsoil is the most important
part of the soil for planting purposes.
Wind, water, animals, and man are agents of
erosion.
When the topsoil is washed away, the remaining
soil will no longer be fertile.Plants will not grow
well in an unfertile soil.
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Wind Erosion
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Interracing,widestepsarecutaroundtheslopesofhills.ThefamousriceterracesofBanaueandBontocareexampleofthis.
How to Prevent
Erosion?
Terracing
In terracing, wide steps are cut
around the slopes of hills.
The famous rice terraces of
Banaue and Bontoc are
example of this.
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How to Prevent
Erosion?
Strip Cropping
In strip cropping, different
plants are grown in
alternating rows of land.
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How to Prevent
Erosion?
Contour Farming
In contour farming, furrows
curve and wind to follow
the shape of the land.
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How to Prevent
Erosion?
Cover Cropping
Cover cropping is the practice
of planting low crops to
protect the soil from being
blown and washed away
by wind and rain.
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Soil Salinity
Soil Salinity is normally only an issue for site planners
working in arid and semi-arid lands, but there it has
proved a very major limiting factor to plant growth.
Some plants have a fairly high tolerance of salinity
such as:
Date palm
Sugar beet
Cotton
Coconut
Very Low tolerance:
Beans
Citrus Fruits
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