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Soil Formation and Composition I. Soil Formation – A. When bedrock is exposed, it weathers. – B. Particles of rock mix with other material. – C. Soil forms - the loose, weathered material on Earth’s surface in which plants can grow. II. Soil Composition – A. Soil is a mixture of: • • • • • 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Rock particles Minerals Decayed organic material (humus) Air Water III. Soil Texture – A. Rock particles come in 4 sizes: • • • • 1. 2. 3. 4. Gravel (2 mm and up) Sand (less than 2 mm) Silt (less than 1/16 mm) Clay (less than 1/256 mm) microscopic view – B. Permeability • 1. Clay soils are dense, heavy and hold a lot of water, so plants may drown. • 2. Sandy/gravel soils have larger air spaces, so water drains quickly. • 3. Loam is made up of equal parts clay, sand, and silt and is good for growing most plants because it holds both air and water. IV. Soil Horizons – A. A layer of soil – The O horizon is leaf litter- a thin layer of organic matter. • 1. Topsoil (The A horizon) – a. Dark brown soil, mixture of humus, clay and other minerals. Develops from C; plant roots weather rocks mechanically and chemically. • 2. Subsoil (The B horizon) – a. Materials washed down from the A horizon, but with little humus. Only roots of very large plants – reach B. • 3. C horizon first step – weathering of bedrock; partly weathered rock • 4. Bedrock –solid layer of rock V. Life in Soil – A. Soil organisms: • 1. mix the soil – a. burrowing mammals and worms mix soil. • 2. create spaces for air and water – a. burrowing mammals and worms do this too. • 3. make humus – a. most comes from plant leaves on the surface, called litter. – b. decomposers break the dead matter down. • i. fungi, protists, bacteria, worms