SlideShare a Scribd company logo
3
Most read
12
Most read
13
Most read
Weathering and Soil Formation 4.2 Weathering and organic processes form soil.
VOCABULARY humus - decayed organic matter (dead leaves) in soil soil horizon - a layer of soil with properties that differ from those of the layer above or below it soil profile - horizons in a specific location
Soil is a mixture of weathered rock particles and other materials. SOIL COMPOSITION Weathered rock particles (main ingredient) Water (20-30%) Air (20-30%)  Organic matter (5%) Organic means, “coming from living organisms.” Organic matter in soil comes from the remains and waste products of plants, animals, and other living organisms. *Soils differ depending on what types of rock the rock particles came from.
Humus comes from decayed organic matter. Different soils are made up of different ingredients and different amounts of each ingredient.  The black humus on the left contains much more plant material and water than the red soil on the right.
Types of Soil The kind of soil that forms in an area depends on: The kind of rock in the area The area’s climate (overall weather pattern) The landforms in the area (mountains, valleys) The plant cover in the area The animals and other organisms in the area Time  *The composition of the soil determines what you can grow in it, what you can build on it and what happens to the rainwater that falls on it.
Soil horizons Soil develops in a series of horizontal layers called horizons.  Deeper soil looks different than that on top. Further down you will find larger, less weathered rock particles and less organic matter.
Main horizons are labeled A, B, C The A Horizon- The upper layer of soil commonly called  topsoil .  Often includes more organic matter (humus) and, therefore, is darker in color.
The B Horizon- Just below the A horizon.  It has little organic matter and is usually brownish or reddish in color.  Contains clay and minerals that wash down from above.
The C Horizon- The deepest layer of soil.  It contains the largest and least-weathered rock particles.  Typically they are light yellowish-brown.
Climate and landforms affect soil Different kinds of soils form in different  climates . Soil that forms in hot, wet climates is different than those that form in cold, dry climates. The  shape of the land  affects soil development. Mountain soils (cold climate) are different than nearby valleys.  Earth’s Surface pg. 124
Activities of organisms affect soil. There is a whole world alive below your feet!
ORGANISMS AFFECTING THE SOIL Plants- Trees/ grasses provide much of the organic matter that forms humus. Microorganisms- Include decomposers (fungi, bacteria).  A spoonful of soil may contain 1 million microorganisms.  They change nitrogen in soil and air to compounds that plants can absorb.  Bacteria can produce acids that break down rocks. Cycling of nutrients pg. 126 Animals- Earthworms, ants, termites, mice and groundhogs all live in the soil.  They add to the air content of the soil by loosening and tunneling the soil.  They help to improve drainage also.  Return nutrients to the soil when they die.
Observable, measurable properties of soil. Texture- Determined by the size of the weathered rock particles that it contains. Color- Comes from iron compounds and humus. Pore Space- Spaces between particles. Soils range from 25-60% pore space.  Ideal growing soil is about 50% pore space. Chemistry- Acidity of water in soil determines how well nutrients dissolve.
Review What are the main ingredients of soil? How do climate and landforms affect soils’ characteristics? How do organisms affect the characteristics of soil? Describe the four properties of soil. Which would be more fertile, soil on hilly land or soil on a plain? Why?

More Related Content

PPTX
Soil Colloids: Properties, Nature, Types and Significance. sources of charges
PPTX
Soil definition by various authors
PPTX
Soil quality
PPT
Presentation of chemical weathering
PPT
Physical and chemical weathering
PPTX
Weathering sequence of soil with special reference to Indian soil.pptx
PPT
Fundamentals of soil science
PPTX
The Process of Soil Formation
Soil Colloids: Properties, Nature, Types and Significance. sources of charges
Soil definition by various authors
Soil quality
Presentation of chemical weathering
Physical and chemical weathering
Weathering sequence of soil with special reference to Indian soil.pptx
Fundamentals of soil science
The Process of Soil Formation

What's hot (20)

DOC
Soil Colloids
PPT
Ocean circulation
PPT
Soil colloids
PPTX
Soil Forming Rocks and Minerals Classification
PDF
Soil as a natural resource
PPTX
Hydrosphere
PPTX
Earth crust and its composition
PPT
STRUCTURE OF THE ATMOSPHERE
PPTX
7-Waterlogging and salinity
PPT
Cation exchange capacity
PPTX
Weathering sequence
PDF
Soil forming processes
PPTX
Soil formation-processes
PPTX
Saline Soils And Their Reclamation.pptx.
PPTX
Sedimentary Rock Classification
PPT
13.4 Stages of a River.ppt
PPT
Soil crusting - causes, prevention and rectification
PPT
soil orders.ppt
PPT
Soil quality
Soil Colloids
Ocean circulation
Soil colloids
Soil Forming Rocks and Minerals Classification
Soil as a natural resource
Hydrosphere
Earth crust and its composition
STRUCTURE OF THE ATMOSPHERE
7-Waterlogging and salinity
Cation exchange capacity
Weathering sequence
Soil forming processes
Soil formation-processes
Saline Soils And Their Reclamation.pptx.
Sedimentary Rock Classification
13.4 Stages of a River.ppt
Soil crusting - causes, prevention and rectification
soil orders.ppt
Soil quality
Ad

Viewers also liked (14)

PPT
PPTX
Petrology
PPTX
Geologic structure, fold fault & unconformity
PPTX
PPT
2 Soil Formation 1
PPT
Geography M1 Intrusive Volcanic
PPTX
Parque de rocas polvoranca
PPT
Rocks AND SOIL FORMATION
PPTX
Rock and weathering booklet
PPT
Formation Of Soil And Soil Types
PPTX
Different types of soil
PPTX
Structural Geology
PPTX
Igneous rocks
PPTX
Soil formation
Petrology
Geologic structure, fold fault & unconformity
2 Soil Formation 1
Geography M1 Intrusive Volcanic
Parque de rocas polvoranca
Rocks AND SOIL FORMATION
Rock and weathering booklet
Formation Of Soil And Soil Types
Different types of soil
Structural Geology
Igneous rocks
Soil formation
Ad

Similar to 4.2 Weathering And Soil Formation (20)

DOCX
Learner notes
PPT
PPTX
Inorganic and organic components of soil (soil composition)
PPTX
Physical behavior of soil
PDF
Chemistry of Soil. Layer composition factors etc
PDF
basically explained the chemistry of soil specially its composition,
PPTX
SOM.pptx
DOCX
PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY 1.5 -STUDY OF SOIL
PPT
Soil Notes
PPT
What is soil
DOCX
soil profile and soil degradation
PPTX
Soil and components
PDF
PLANT ECOLOGY-converted.pdf
PDF
PPT
PDF
Soil profile physical geography B.A. Honours Geography
PPTX
Soil Profile
PPTX
Soil resources
PPTX
Land and soil cbse class 8 geography
Learner notes
Inorganic and organic components of soil (soil composition)
Physical behavior of soil
Chemistry of Soil. Layer composition factors etc
basically explained the chemistry of soil specially its composition,
SOM.pptx
PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY 1.5 -STUDY OF SOIL
Soil Notes
What is soil
soil profile and soil degradation
Soil and components
PLANT ECOLOGY-converted.pdf
Soil profile physical geography B.A. Honours Geography
Soil Profile
Soil resources
Land and soil cbse class 8 geography

More from mrmartella (17)

PPTX
Box of rocks
PPTX
Motion and forces 1.1
PPT
Ea 3.1 weather fronts and storms
PPTX
1.3 gases in the atmosphere absorb radiation
PPTX
Volcanoes 3 3
PPT
Earth Science
PPT
Geomythology
PPT
Igneousppt
PPT
Maps And Globes Are Models Of The Earth
PPT
Coal In Pa
PPT
Photography 1
PPT
Earth Science
PPT
Pressure
PPT
F= Ma
PPT
Forces
PPT
Standards Of Measurement
PPT
Welcome To 7th Grade Integrated Science
Box of rocks
Motion and forces 1.1
Ea 3.1 weather fronts and storms
1.3 gases in the atmosphere absorb radiation
Volcanoes 3 3
Earth Science
Geomythology
Igneousppt
Maps And Globes Are Models Of The Earth
Coal In Pa
Photography 1
Earth Science
Pressure
F= Ma
Forces
Standards Of Measurement
Welcome To 7th Grade Integrated Science

Recently uploaded (20)

DOCX
The AUB Centre for AI in Media Proposal.docx
PDF
NewMind AI Monthly Chronicles - July 2025
PDF
Bridging biosciences and deep learning for revolutionary discoveries: a compr...
PDF
The Rise and Fall of 3GPP – Time for a Sabbatical?
PDF
Chapter 3 Spatial Domain Image Processing.pdf
PPTX
Effective Security Operations Center (SOC) A Modern, Strategic, and Threat-In...
PPTX
Digital-Transformation-Roadmap-for-Companies.pptx
PPTX
MYSQL Presentation for SQL database connectivity
PDF
Dropbox Q2 2025 Financial Results & Investor Presentation
PDF
NewMind AI Weekly Chronicles - August'25 Week I
PDF
cuic standard and advanced reporting.pdf
PDF
Network Security Unit 5.pdf for BCA BBA.
PDF
Blue Purple Modern Animated Computer Science Presentation.pdf.pdf
PPTX
PA Analog/Digital System: The Backbone of Modern Surveillance and Communication
PPT
Teaching material agriculture food technology
PDF
Reach Out and Touch Someone: Haptics and Empathic Computing
PDF
CIFDAQ's Market Insight: SEC Turns Pro Crypto
PDF
Spectral efficient network and resource selection model in 5G networks
PDF
Modernizing your data center with Dell and AMD
PPTX
20250228 LYD VKU AI Blended-Learning.pptx
The AUB Centre for AI in Media Proposal.docx
NewMind AI Monthly Chronicles - July 2025
Bridging biosciences and deep learning for revolutionary discoveries: a compr...
The Rise and Fall of 3GPP – Time for a Sabbatical?
Chapter 3 Spatial Domain Image Processing.pdf
Effective Security Operations Center (SOC) A Modern, Strategic, and Threat-In...
Digital-Transformation-Roadmap-for-Companies.pptx
MYSQL Presentation for SQL database connectivity
Dropbox Q2 2025 Financial Results & Investor Presentation
NewMind AI Weekly Chronicles - August'25 Week I
cuic standard and advanced reporting.pdf
Network Security Unit 5.pdf for BCA BBA.
Blue Purple Modern Animated Computer Science Presentation.pdf.pdf
PA Analog/Digital System: The Backbone of Modern Surveillance and Communication
Teaching material agriculture food technology
Reach Out and Touch Someone: Haptics and Empathic Computing
CIFDAQ's Market Insight: SEC Turns Pro Crypto
Spectral efficient network and resource selection model in 5G networks
Modernizing your data center with Dell and AMD
20250228 LYD VKU AI Blended-Learning.pptx

4.2 Weathering And Soil Formation

  • 1. Weathering and Soil Formation 4.2 Weathering and organic processes form soil.
  • 2. VOCABULARY humus - decayed organic matter (dead leaves) in soil soil horizon - a layer of soil with properties that differ from those of the layer above or below it soil profile - horizons in a specific location
  • 3. Soil is a mixture of weathered rock particles and other materials. SOIL COMPOSITION Weathered rock particles (main ingredient) Water (20-30%) Air (20-30%) Organic matter (5%) Organic means, “coming from living organisms.” Organic matter in soil comes from the remains and waste products of plants, animals, and other living organisms. *Soils differ depending on what types of rock the rock particles came from.
  • 4. Humus comes from decayed organic matter. Different soils are made up of different ingredients and different amounts of each ingredient. The black humus on the left contains much more plant material and water than the red soil on the right.
  • 5. Types of Soil The kind of soil that forms in an area depends on: The kind of rock in the area The area’s climate (overall weather pattern) The landforms in the area (mountains, valleys) The plant cover in the area The animals and other organisms in the area Time *The composition of the soil determines what you can grow in it, what you can build on it and what happens to the rainwater that falls on it.
  • 6. Soil horizons Soil develops in a series of horizontal layers called horizons. Deeper soil looks different than that on top. Further down you will find larger, less weathered rock particles and less organic matter.
  • 7. Main horizons are labeled A, B, C The A Horizon- The upper layer of soil commonly called topsoil . Often includes more organic matter (humus) and, therefore, is darker in color.
  • 8. The B Horizon- Just below the A horizon. It has little organic matter and is usually brownish or reddish in color. Contains clay and minerals that wash down from above.
  • 9. The C Horizon- The deepest layer of soil. It contains the largest and least-weathered rock particles. Typically they are light yellowish-brown.
  • 10. Climate and landforms affect soil Different kinds of soils form in different climates . Soil that forms in hot, wet climates is different than those that form in cold, dry climates. The shape of the land affects soil development. Mountain soils (cold climate) are different than nearby valleys. Earth’s Surface pg. 124
  • 11. Activities of organisms affect soil. There is a whole world alive below your feet!
  • 12. ORGANISMS AFFECTING THE SOIL Plants- Trees/ grasses provide much of the organic matter that forms humus. Microorganisms- Include decomposers (fungi, bacteria). A spoonful of soil may contain 1 million microorganisms. They change nitrogen in soil and air to compounds that plants can absorb. Bacteria can produce acids that break down rocks. Cycling of nutrients pg. 126 Animals- Earthworms, ants, termites, mice and groundhogs all live in the soil. They add to the air content of the soil by loosening and tunneling the soil. They help to improve drainage also. Return nutrients to the soil when they die.
  • 13. Observable, measurable properties of soil. Texture- Determined by the size of the weathered rock particles that it contains. Color- Comes from iron compounds and humus. Pore Space- Spaces between particles. Soils range from 25-60% pore space. Ideal growing soil is about 50% pore space. Chemistry- Acidity of water in soil determines how well nutrients dissolve.
  • 14. Review What are the main ingredients of soil? How do climate and landforms affect soils’ characteristics? How do organisms affect the characteristics of soil? Describe the four properties of soil. Which would be more fertile, soil on hilly land or soil on a plain? Why?