Soil science
Soil science deals with soil as a natural resource on the surface of the earth.
It includes soil formation, classification and mapping.[1]
But many more sciences deal with knowledge of soils and the advancement of the soil sciences: engineering, agronomists, chemistry, geology, geography, biology, microbiology, sylviculture, public health, archaeology, and regional planning.
"Soil" refers to anything between the top of the dirt and the top of the underlying rock (called "bedrock"). Soil is often broken into layers. The top layer is high in organic matter (roting plants and such). Then there is a layer of layer of soil where rain water has removed some metals (called "leaching"). Those metals get collected in another, lower layer. Finally, there is a layer made up mostly of broken bits of bedrock. A soil can have all of these layers, or only a few.
Soils are important because most groundwater, which is used in everything from city water supplies to farming, is found in soil, not bedrock.
Fields of application in soil science
- Soil survey
- Soil management
- Standard methods of analysis
- Soil fertility / Nutrient management
- Ecosystem studies
- Climate change
- Watershed and wetland studies
- Pedotransfer function
References
Related disciplines
Other websites
- Certified Professional Soil Scientist Archived 2006-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
- Registered Professional Soil Scientist Archived 2011-01-04 at the Wayback Machine (PDF)
- SoilScience.info
- SoilScience.info's Daily Dirt - Soil Science in Mainstream Media and Popular Press Archived 2016-01-24 at the Wayback Machine
- SoilScience.info's Job Listings Archived 2016-01-24 at the Wayback Machine