Glossary Reversed Flashcards
Reversed
The removal of soil material in suspension (or in solution) from a layer or layers of a soil. Usually, the loss of material in solution is described by the term “leaching.”
eluviation
Reversed
A chemical element necessary in only extremely small amounts (
micronutrient
Reversed
The science that deals with the influence of soils on living things, particularly plants, including human use of land for plant growth.
edaphology
Reversed
The ratio of the weight of organic carbon (C) to the weight of total nitrogen (N) in a soil or in organic material.
carbon/nitrogen (C/N) ratio
Reversed
That portion of any element or compound in the soil that can be readily absorbed and assimilated by growing plants. (“Available” should not be confused with “exchangeable.”)
available nutrient
Reversed
An order in Soil Taxonomy. Soils developed from volcanic ejecta. The colloidal fraction is dominated by allophane and/or Al-humus compounds.
andisols
Reversed
The interchange between a cation in solution and another cation on the surface of any surface-active material, such as clay or organic matter.
cation exchange
Reversed
(1) A soil separate consisting of particles 40% clay,
clay
Reversed
A rock that has been greatly altered from its previous condition thorugh the combined action of heat and pressure. For example, marble is a metamorphic rock produced from limestone, gneiss is produced from granite, and slate is produced from shale.
metamorphic rock
Reversed
A positively charged ion; during electrolysis it is attracted to the negatively charged cathode.
cation
Reversed
The negative logarithm of the hydrogen ion activity (concentration) in the soil solution. The degree of acidity (or alkalinity) of a soil as determined by means of a glass or other suitable electrode or indicator at a specified moisture content or soil-to-water ratio, and expressed in terms of the pH scale.
pH, soil
Reversed
A condition in plants relating to the failure of chlorophyll (the green coloring matter) to develop. Chlorotic leaves range from light green through yellow to almost white.
chlorosis
Reversed
An order in Soil Taxonomy. Soils of dry climates. They have pedogenic horizons, low in organic matter, that are never moist for as long as three consecutive months. They have an ochric epipedon and one or more of the following diagnostic horizons: argillic, natric, cambic, calcic, petrocalcic, gypsic, petrogypsic, salic, or a duripan.
aridisols
Reversed
The mass of dry soil per unit of bulk volume, including the air space. The bulk volume is determined before drying to constant weight at 105 degrees Celsius.
bulk density, soil
Reversed
The amount of moisture in a dry soil when it is in equilibrium with some standard relative humidity near a saturated atmosphere (about 98%), expressed in terms of percentage on the basis of oven-dry soil.
hygroscopic coefficient
Reversed
A mineral that has not been altered chemically since deposition and crystallization from molten lava.
primary mineral
Reversed
The quality of a soil that enables it to provide essential chemical elements in quantities and proportions for the growth of specified plants.
fertility, soil
Reversed
An order in Soil Taxonomy. Soils with subsurface illuvial accumulations of organic matter and compounds of aluminum and usually iron. These soils are formed in acid, mainly coarse-textured materials in humid and mostly cool or temperate climates.
Spodosols
Reversed
A rock formed from materials deposited from suspension or precipitated from solution and usually being more or less consolidated. The principal sedimentary rocks are sandstones, shales, limestones, and conglomerates.
sedimentary rock
Reversed
(1) A dynamic natural body composed of mineral and organic solids, gases, liquids, and living organisms which can serve as a medium for plant growth. (2) The collection of natural bodies occupying parts of the Earth’s surface that is capable of supporting plant growth and that has properties resulting from the integrated effects of climate and living organisms acting upon parent material, as conditioned by topography, over periods of time.
soil
Reversed
The percentage of water remaining in a soil two or three days after its having been saturated and after free drainage has practically ceased.
field capacity (field moisture capacity)
Reversed
A soil condition resulting from prolonged saturation with water and reducing conditions that manifest themselves in greenish or bluish colors throughout the soil mass or in mottles
gleyed
Reversed
A common endomycorrhizal association produced by phycomycetous fungi and characterized by the development, within root cells, of small structures known as arbuscules. Some also form, between root cells, storage organs known as vesicles. Host range includes many agricultural and horticultural crops. Formerly called vesicular arbuscular mycorrhiza (VAM)
arbuscular mycorrhiza
Reversed
Physical disruption and displacement of soil material within the profile by the forces of freezing and thawing. Sometimes called frost churning, it results in irregular, broken horizons, involutions, oriented rock fragments, and accumulation of organic matter on the permafrost table.
cryoturbation
Reversed
The mass per unit volume of the soil particles. In technical work, usually expressed as metric tons per cubic meter (Mg/m3) or grams per cubic centimeter (g/cm3).
particle density
Reversed
An order in Soil Taxonomy. Soils with gray to brown surface surface horizons, medium to high supply of bases, and B horizons of illuvial clay accumulation. These soils from mostly under forest or savanna vegetation in climates with slight to pronounced seasonal moisture deficit.
alfisoils
Reversed
The degree or intensity of alkalinity of a soil, expressed by a value of >7.0 on the pH scale.
soil alkalinity
Reversed
Stress surfaces that are polished and striated and are produced by one mass sliding past another.
slickensides
Reversed
That portion of the total soil water potential due to the presence of solutes in soil water. It will generally be negative.
osmotic potential
Reversed
Positively or negatively charged atoms or groups of atoms that are held on or near the surface of a solid particle by attraction to charges of the opposite sign, and which may be replaced by other like-charged ions in the soil solution.
exchangeable ions
Reversed
The more or less stable fraction of the soil organic matter remaining after the major portions of added plant and animal residues have decomposed. Usually it is dark in color.
humus
Reversed
To aggregate or clump together individual, tiny soil particles, especially fine clay, into small clumps or floccules.
flocculate
Reversed
The removal of materials in solution from the soil by percolating waters.
leaching
Reversed
A layer of soil, approximately parallel to the soil surface, differing in properties and characteristics from adjacent layers below or above it.
horizon, soil
Reversed
A subsurface diagnostic horizon having a sharp clay increase relative to overlying horizons and having low-activity clays.
kandic horizon
Reversed
Material transported and deposited by wind and consisting of predominantly silt-sized particles.
loess
Reversed
The water held in the capillary or small pores of a soil, usually with a tension >60 cm of water.
capillary water
Reversed
Dense and brittle pan or subsurface layer in soils that owes its hardness mainly to extreme density or compactness rather than high clay content or cementation. Removed fragments are friable, but the material in place is so dense that roots penetrate and water moves through it very slowly.
fragipan
Reversed
The aqueous liquid phase of the soil and its solutes, consisting of ions dissociated from the surfaces of the soil particles and of other soluble materials.
soil solution
Reversed
An order in Soil Taxonomy. Soils with nearly black, organic rich surface horizons and high supply of bases. They have mollic epipedons and base saturation greater than 50% in any cambic or argillic horizon. They lack the characteristics of Vertisols and must not have oxic or spodic horizons.
mollisols
Reversed
A diagnostic surface horizon of mineral soil that is dark colored and relatively thick, contains at least 0.6% organic carbon, is not massive and hard when dry, has a base saturation of more than 50%, has less than 250 mg/kg P2O5 soluble in 1% citric acid, and is dominantly saturated with bivalent cations.
mollic epipedon
Reversed
The systematic examination, description, classification, and mapping of soils in an area. Soil surveys are classified according to the kind and intensity of field examination.
soil survey
Reversed
(1) The absense of molecular oxygen. (2) Growing or occurring in the absence of molecular oxygen (e.g., anaerobic bacteria or biochemical reduction reaction).
anaerobic
Reversed
The surface horizon of a mineral soil having maximum organic matter accumulation, maximum biological activity, and/or eluviation of materials such as iron and aluminum oxides and silicate clays.
A horizon
Reversed
In strict chemical terms, calcium oxide. In practical terms, a material containing the carbonates, oxides, and/or hydroxides of calcium and/or magnesium used to neutralize soil acidity.
lime (agricultural)
Reversed
That portion of the total soil water potential due to differences in elevation of the reference pool of pure water and that of the soil water. Since the soil water elevation is usually chosen to be higher than that of the reference pool, the gravitational potential is usually positive.
gravitational potential
Reversed
That portion of the total soil water potential due to the attractive forces between water and soil solids as represented through adsorption and capillarity. It will always be negative.
matric potential
Reversed
Plant material incorporated with the soil while green, or soon after maturity, for improving the soil.
green manure
Reversed
An order in Soil Taxonomy. Soils that have permafrost within the upper 1 m, or upper 2 m if cryoturbation is also present. They may have an ochric, histic, mollic, or other epipedon.
Gelisols