Main category for all glossary items
Flat and swampy land, usually low in altitude and similar to a bog or marsh.
Application of mainly mineral compounds, in order to increase soil fertility. In some cases, (e.g. liming) the purpose of fertilization is also to improve specific soil properties (pH, stability of soil structure).
Field capacity has been defined as the soil moisture state when, 48 hours after saturation or heavy rain, all downward movement of water has ceased. It is the water content retained at low suctions (5-33kPa) depending on soil type, and is the upper limit of plant available water.
(i) A broad group of textures consisting of, or containing, large quantities of fine fractions, particularly silt and clay. Includes sandy clay, silty clay, and clay texture classes. (ii) When used in reference to family particle-size classes in U.S. and FAO soil taxonomy, is specifically defined as having 35 to 60 percent clay. See also soil texture.
Material moved from the margins of glaciers and subsequently sorted and deposited by streams flowing from the melting ice.
Science of landforms that studies the evolution of the Earth's surface and interprets landforms as records of geological history.
Al(OH)3. Mineral with a platy structure, that occurs in highly weathered soils and in laterite.
Unstratified deposits laid down directly beneath the ice or dropped from the surface as the ice melted.
Large masses of ice that form by the compaction and recrystallization of snow under freezing conditions; glaciers often move downslope or outward in all directions because of the stress of their own weight; they may be stagnant or retreating under warming conditions.
Material moved by glaciers and subsequently sorted and deposited by streams flowing from the melting ice. The deposits are stratified and may occur in the form of outwash plains, deltas, kames, eskers, and kame terraces. See also Glacial drift and till.
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