scholarly journals Creating GIS on the pilot area of the Litoměřice district. From soil survey to international information systems

2010 ◽  
Vol 5 (No. 1) ◽  
pp. 10-20
Author(s):  
J. Sládková

The procedure of processing and utilising the soil information entering the SOTER system is tested on the pilot area of the Litoměřice district. The reliability of the archive data is examined, the archive data being updated by a new soil survey, modern (geo)statistical methods, and pedotransfer rules. Using the SOTER methodology, a soil map of the district with the scale of 1:50 000 has been developed. Proposals for the adjustments to the currently valid soil classification system are processed.

Author(s):  
Anthony S. R. Juo ◽  
Kathrin Franzluebbers

Several pedological soil classification schemes have been developed to classify soils worldwide based on morphological features, stage of weathering, and to some extent their chemical and physical properties. Three soil classification systems are commonly used as research and teaching tools in the tropics, namely, the USDA Soil Taxonomy classification, the FAO/UNESCO World Soil Legends, and the French soil classification system. Brazil, the country with the largest land area in the tropics, has its own national soil classification system. However, soil survey, classification, and interpretation are costly and time-consuming, and few countries in the tropics have completed soil maps that are at a scale detailed enough to be useful to farmers and land users. In the absence of soil information at state, county or farm level, the authors propose a simple descriptive grouping of major soils in the tropics based on clay mineralogy to facilitate discussion on soil management and plant production in the subsequent chapters of this book. Reference to the Soil Taxonomy classification will be made when such information is available. It should be pointed out that the main purpose of this technical grouping is to provide field workers, especially those who are less familiar with the various soil classification systems, with a simple framework for planning soil management strategies. It by no means replaces the national and international soil taxonomy and classification systems that are designed for communication among soil scientists and for more detailed interpretation of soil survey data and land-use planning. This technical scheme classifies major arable soils in the tropics into four groupings according to their dominant clay mineralogy. They are • kaolinitic soils • oxidic soils • allophanic soils • smectitic soils Kaolinitic soils are deeply weathered soils with a sand, loamy sand, or sandy loam texture in the surface horizon and a clayey B horizon (20-60%). Silt content is low (< 20%) throughout the profile. Kaolinite (> 90%) is the dominant mineral in the clay fraction. These soils have an effective CEC of less than 12 cmol/kg of clay in the lower B horizon. Kaolinitic soils have a relatively high bulk density, especially in the clayey subsoil horizons (> 1.40 Mg/m3). The structure of the subsoil horizons is usually massive or blocky.


2011 ◽  
Vol 91 (5) ◽  
pp. 675-694 ◽  
Author(s):  
Darwin W. Anderson ◽  
C. A. Scott Smith

Anderson, D. W. and Smith, C. A. S. 2011. A history of soil classification and soil survey in Canada: Personal perspectives. Can. J. Soil Sci. 91: 675–694. This paper presents an overview of soil classification and soil survey in Canada based on both historical documentation and the personal experiences and perspectives of the two authors. The first soil surveys in Canada beginning in Ontario in 1914 are described along with the earliest systems of soil classification. The roots of the current system of soil classification in Canada can be traced back to the establishment of the first meeting of the National Soil Survey Committee (later the Canada Soil Survey Committee) held in Ottawa in 1945. The Committee met every 2 to 3 years and a hard-cover “first” edition, “The Canadian System of Soil Classification” was published in 1978 and a slightly revised second edition in 1987. The third edition (1998) includes a more complete key and a tenth order, the Vertisolic Order. The four to five decades starting in the late 1940s were the glory years for soil survey in Canada, with well-funded and productive programs in all provinces and territories, with major outputs like the Canada Land Inventory. The period between mid 1990s and 2010 saw declining activity in new field survey and reductions in staff levels by government agencies, but a rise in private sector soil survey, largely for environmental assessment purposes. There is a renewed and on-going interest in and need for soil information. The challenge for pedologists is to provide reliable information in innovative and proactive ways.


Soil Horizons ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 45 (4) ◽  
pp. 129 ◽  
Author(s):  
X. Z. Shi ◽  
D. S. Yu ◽  
E. D. Warner ◽  
X. Z. Pan ◽  
G. W. Petersen ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 5-30
Author(s):  
N. V. Savitskaya ◽  
T. V. Ananko ◽  
M. I. Gerasimova

The development of the digital model of the soil map of Russia derived of the map of the Soviet Russian Federation, 1988, compiled in Dokuchaev Soil Science Institute, comprises the transfer of soil names in the initial legend to those in the new classification system of Russian soils (2004). Floodplain soils (only native) are represented by seven legend units (out of 205) that were named in terms of soil classification of USSR, 1977, and part of their names indicated ‘landscapes’ rather than soils, which disagrees with the principles of the new classification system. Basing on numerous publications and following the rules of the new system, soils were renamed. Most of them were referred to alluvial soil types within the synlithogenic trunk (Fluvisols), and their new names indicate both their properties and their zonal attachment. In order to obtain more adequate patterns of soils in river valleys additional soils were introduced including stratified-alluvial soils in the trunk of primary pedogenesis (Regosols). Simultaneously, the composition of polygons in the database was revised in accordance with regional data; human-modified soils were introduced (agro-soils and urbo-soils). 


2008 ◽  
Vol 3 (No. 4) ◽  
pp. 183-198
Author(s):  
J. Sládková

The article presents an overview and brief characteristics of the selected soil information systems in the Czech Republic. It suggests synchronisation of their development, particularly some convergence of the Land Evaluation Information System and Soil and Terrain Digital Database. In the pilot area of Litoměřice district, it demonstrates the application of the SOTER methodology for the construction of middle- and detail-scale soil maps, using the data from the General survey of agricultural soils. It not only shows the variety of the district soil conditions, but it also supplements them with the data gathered in the 2006 soil survey.


1987 ◽  
Vol 67 (4) ◽  
pp. 765-778 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. A. FOX ◽  
C. TARNOCAI ◽  
R. TROWBRIDGE

The Folisol great group within the Organic soil order was expanded by the Expert Committee on Soil Survey to include the subgroups Hemic, Humic, Lignic and Histic Folisols. Representative Folisols from the Coastal Western Hemlock biogeoclimatic zone in British Columbia were studied to document the macromorphology and chemical characteristics of these subgroups. A proposal for improving F and H horizon designations is also presented. This documentation and improvements to the classification system provide a better basis for the soil surveyor to recognize and account for thick accumulations (> 40 cm) of folic materials overlying mineral or peat materials as well as accumulations (> 10 cm) over rock or fragmental material. Key words: Folisols, organic material, soil classification, Organic soil order


2010 ◽  
Vol 5 (No. 4) ◽  
pp. 172-185
Author(s):  
J. Sládková

The article illustrates the compatibility of the Czech Republic Taxonomic Soil Classification System validated in the CR with the international World Reference Base for Soil Resources. It utilises the archive data on the soil types, subtypes, and varieties from the General survey of agricultural soils in the Czech Republic and soil profiles from new soil survey on the pilot area of Litoměřice district. It indicates the possibilities of the future refinement of both systems.


2018 ◽  
pp. 58-70 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. I. Gerasimova ◽  
T. V. Ananko ◽  
D. E. Konyushkov

The analysis of the Soil Map of the Russian Federation (1 : 2.5 M scale, 1988) with identification of soils shown in each polygon in categories of the classification system of Russian soils (2004, 2008) is the first stage of work on creating the new digital soil map of Russia. It demonstrated the need to introduce a number of amendments to the classification system. They concern the definitions and names of diagnostic horizons and diagnostic features of soils. Thus, it is suggested that the mucky–dark humus horizon AH should be renamed as the mucky–humus horizon (as its properties do not fit the definition of the dark humus horizon in the system). Several new diagnostic features are introduced; for permafrost-affected soils, supra-permafrost accumulation of organic matter is designated by symbol cro. It is also suggested that the lists of soils at the subtype level, which reflects the development of certain diagnostic features, should be more flexible without their "rigid" linking to the given types. The aim of these changes is to reflect the accumulated information on the diversity of soils in Russia as displayed on the Soil Map of the Russian Federation (1988) and in the State Register of Soil Resources more adequately in the new classification system of Russian soils.


2012 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 01
Author(s):  
António Francisco Sá e Melo Marques ◽  
Paulo Pereira Martins Junior ◽  
Vitor Vieira Vasconcelos ◽  
Leandro Arb D'Abreu Novaes

A carta de solos e a de aptidão agrícola são instrumentos essenciais para o planejamento territorial sustentável da expansão agropecuária brasileira. Apresenta-se uma atualização da carta de solos e de aptidão agrícola para a bacia do Rio Paracatu (Noroeste de Minas Gerais), em escala de detalhe de 1:250.000. Propõe-se uma metodologia para a adequação da antiga carta ao novo Sistema Brasileiro de Classificação de Solos e, utilizando uma nova proposta de adaptação de aptidão agrícola para o sistema da FAO/Brasileiro sobre a carta de solos, foi gerado um novo mapa de aptidão agrícola. Os produtos apresentados mostram-se úteis para o planejamento territorial sustentável da bacia hidrográfica em estudo. A metodologia proposta de aptidão agrícola conseguiu conciliar melhor a produção agrícola com a conservação ambiental, podendo ser replicada para outras regiões.  Palavras-Chave: Pedologia, Aptidão Agrícola, Bacia do Rio Paracatu, Planejamento de Uso do Solo Methodological Propositions on Soil Cartography and Agricultural Aptness Cartography: Case Study of Paracatu River Basin  ABSTRACTThe soil map and the agricultural aptness map are important tools for Brazilian agricultural and livestock sustainable territorial management. In this paper, the Paracatu River Basin Soil map has been updated, in a 1:250.000 scale. A methodology is proposed to adequate the chart to the new Brazilian Soil Classification System. Thus, the Soil map is applied to develop an agricultural aptness map, via a new adjusted approach to FAO/Brazilian System. The maps will be useful for the sustainable planning of the basin. The proposed agricultural aptness methodology can better conciliate the agriculture with the environmental conservation. Thus, it is possible to replicate the methodology to other regions.  Keywords: Soil Science, Agricultural Aptness, Paracatu River Basin, Land Use Management.


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