GLOSSARY acidic - with a low pH (<7), or abundance of hydronium ion (H+) in solution aging upwards sequence - sedimentary succession including paleosols whose degree of development is generally stronger for paleosols higher within the succession than for those near the base agglomeroplasmic - soil microfabric in which there is an incomplete or local fine-grained matrix to skeleton grains agrotubule - tubular feature of soil filled with pellet-like clasts of and clastic grains A horizon - surface horizon of a soil, commonly including organic matter Albaqualf - kind of Alfisol that shows gley features and a sandy near surface horizon above the clayey subsurface horizon albic horizon - light colored soil horizon characterized by less organic matter, less sesquioxides (Fe2O3 and Al2O3), or less clay than the underlying horizon. Its light color is due largely to quartz and feldspar. Alfisol - fertile forest soil, with subsurface clayey, ferruginized or humic horizon alkali elements - sodium (Na) and potassium (K) alkaline - with a high pH (>7), and low activity of hydronium (H+) ions in solution alkaline earth elements - calcium (Ca) and magnesium (Mg) allophane - poorly ordered hydrous aluminum silicate alluvial fan - large conical landform deposited by streams entering intermontane basins from narrow mountain valleys alluvium - sedimentary deposits of rivers alumina - aluminum oxide (Al2O3) alveolar-septal structure - micromorphology of calcareous soils, with thin micritic compartments filled with sparry calcite, thought to form around fungi associated with roots anaerobic decay - a metabolic reaction in which organic matter is broken down in the absence of oxygen into simpler compounds, including CO andesite - silica saturated volcanic rock, often porphyritic with large crystals commonly plagioclase and groundmass; characteristic of volcanic arcs associated with subduction zones andic - with properties like that of an Andisol Andisol - Inceptisol-like soils formed on volcanic ash, with low bulk density, high porosity and great fertility anthropic epipedon - surface horizon of a soil altered by human activity, such as habitation Ap horizon - A horizon disrupted by plowing or other comparable disturbance Aqualf - kind of Alfisol with gley features Aquent - kind of Entisol with gley features Aquept - kind of Inceptisol with gley features aquic - showing gley features Aquod - kind of Spodosol with gley features Aquoll - kind of Mollisol with gley features Aquox - kind of Oxisol with gley features Aquult - kind of Ultisol with gley features aragonite - mineral with the same chemical composition as calcite, but a different crystal structure, primarily found in skeletons of molluscs Arent - kind of Entisol, with surface layers mixed by plowing or other human activity Argid - kind of Andisol with argillic or natric horizons argillan - cutan consisting of clay argillasepic - soil microfabric mainly of clay and lacking highly birefringent streaks when viewed in thin section under crossed nicols argillic horizons - soil horizon of clay enrichment, recognized in the field by oriented clay films that coat either mineral grains, small channels or ped surfaces. Compared with eluvial horizons argillic horizons have 3% more clay if eluvial horizon clay is 10-15%, 12% more clay if eluvial horizon clay is 15-40%, or 8% more if eluvial horizon clay is 40-100%. Argiustoll - kind of Ustoll with a clayey subsurface horizon Andisol - desert soil, usually thin profiles, commonly with calcareous nodules or salt crystals within a meter of the surface anthropod - phylum of jointed legged animals, such as insects, spiders, and crayfish asepic - soil microfabric lacking highly birefringent streaks (plasma separations) when viewed under crossed nicols atomic absorption spectrometry - method of chemical analysis using light absorption wavelengths of flaming aerosol of sample backfill structure - sinuous or simply curved layering within the filling sediment of a burrow produced by movement of an animal badlands - erosional landform of deeply gullied sedimentary rocks too unstable and in too dry a climate to support a cover of vegetation basaltic rocks - rocks like basalt, that are rich in iron and magnesium, fined grained and generally produced as volcanic flows base - principal cations of soil solutions (Ca2+, Mg2+, Na+, K+) base saturation - percentage of the cation exchange capacity due to bases basket podzol - locally thickened sandy subsurface (E or eluvial) horizon under an individual tree bauxite - highly weathered material rich in aluminum, and poor in humus, silica and bases, consisting mainly of gibbsite or similar minerals Bc horizon - B horizon with concretions or nodules Bg horizon - B horizon with strong gleying B horizon - subsurface horizon of soil, often enriched in clay or carbonate billet - small sawn slab of rock used to prepare a petrographic thin section bimasepic - sepic plasmic fabric with a network of highly birefringent streaks in two preferred directions biofunction - mathematical relationship between soil features and soil biota biosequence - set of soils formed under similar climate, topographic setting, parent material and time, but different vegetation or other organisms bioturbated - mixed and moved by the burrowing, rooting and other activities of organisms birefringence - iridescent appearance of minerals when viewed in a microscope under cross-polarized light birnessite - poorly crystalline mineral of dark iron and manganese oxides Bk horizon - B horizon with accumulation of carbonates, usually calcite nodules blocky peds - a form of ped that is polygonal and nearly equant in shape Bn horizon - B horizon with accumulation of sodium bog - general term for wetland vegetation, used especially for vegetation of mosses Bo horizon - B horizon with residual accumulation of sesquioxides Bonalf - a kind of Alfisol of cool to cold climates Boroll - a kind of Mollisol of cool to cold climates breccia - coarse grained rock with angular clasts Bs horizon - B horizon with illuvial accumulation of sesquioxides Bt horizon - B horizon with illuvial accumulation of clay bulk density - a measure of mass in a given volume (grams per cubic centimeter); usually indicated by symbol ρ burrow - tunnel or other excavation of a soil animal butte - isolated hill or mountain with steep sides, usually having a smaller summit area than a mesa Bw horizon - with colored or structural B horizon By horizon - B horizon with accumulation of gypsum Bz horizon - B horizon with accumulation of salts calcareous - consisting largely of calcite calciasepic - soil microfabric dominated by a mixture of clay and clay-sized carbonate, and lacking highly birefringent streaks when viewed in thin section under crossed nicols calcic horizon - subsurface soil horizon enriched in calcite or dolomite in the form of coatings, wisps or nodules, and at least 15 cm thick with at least 5% more carbonate than underlying horizons. calcification - soil building process of the accumulation of carbonate, usually as nodules in subsurface horizons calcite - carbonate mineral (CaCO3) calcrete - rock cemented with calcium carbonate caliche - pedogenic calcium carbonate nodules or layers cambic horizon - subsurface soil horizon with at least enough pedogenic alteration to eradicate some rock structure, form some soil structure, and remove or redistribute primary carbonate. Their color has higher chroma or redder hue than does the color of the underlying horizons. capillary action - tendency of fluids to rise in a small cylinder due to surface tension carbonaceous - with abundant organic matter carbonate - common anion (CO32-) in soil solution and component of carbonate minerals such as calcite and siderite and skeletons such as mollusc shells carboxyl - common radical of organic acids (COOH+) caries texture - soil microfabric in which grains are deeply embayed because of local dissolution or hydrolysis carnivore - animal that eats meat carr - wetland vegetation of trees with alkaline groundwater cation exchange capacity - measure of a soils exchangeable cations (mainly H+, Al3+, Ca2+, Mg2+, Na+, K+), usually by displacement with ammonium chloride and titration for its abundance catena - A sequence of soils developed from similar parent material under similar climatic conditions but whose characteristics differ because of variations in relief and drainage. celadonite - clay mineral {(K,Ca,Na)-1.6(Fe3+, Al, Mg, Fe2+)4Si7.3Al0.7O20(OH)4} cement - fine grained binding substance that holds together rocks and firm parts of soil, typically silica or calcium carbonate C horizon - subsurface soil horizon, excluding bedrock, with slightly more weathered material from which the soil formed or is presumed to have formed. Lacks properties of A and B horizons, but includes weathering as shown by mineral oxidation, accumulation of silica, carbonates or more soluble salts, and gleying. chalcedony - microcrystalline quartz (SiO2) chaparral - synonym of fireprone shrubland, used mainly in California charcoal - charred wood chelate - a chemical compound capable of transporting elements or compounds by means of a particularly favorable site of attachment (from Greek chela for claw) chlorite - clay like mineral {(Mg,Fe2+, Fe3+, Mn, Al)12[(Si,Al)8O20](OH)16} chroma - purity of color, or degree to which a color is not masked by darkness or lightness in the Munsell system of color Chromudert - a kind of Vertisol of humid seasonally dry climates, which has some horizons that are not black chronofunction - mathematical relationship between soil features and the time over which they develop chronosequence - set of soils formed under similar climate vegetation, topographic position and parent material but over varying lengths of time clastic dike - crack in soil or sediment filled with contrasting material: silan in terminology of Brewer clay skin - coating of clay along cracks or grains within a soil: argillan in terminology of Brewer clinobimasepic - sepic plasmic farbic with a network of highly birefringent streaks in two preferred directions and at a low angle clinometer - device for measuring angular deviation from horizontal coal - black carbon-rich rock formed by burial alteration of peat coalification - process forming coal from peat by expulsion of volatile materials and enrichment in carbon due to heat and pressure of deep burial colloid - material that is too fine grained to be visible under the optical microscope, includes soil iron stain and clay colluvium. Soil materials that accumulate on and at the base of slopes by gravitational action. complex-response - Change of the bedload transport rate in a fluvial system in response to a single external perturbation. compression - form of fossil preservation in which the organic remains of the fossil are crushed and coalified between bedding planes concretion - glaebule with concentric internal fabric, usually because of periodic addition of material. These are hard, locally cemented lumps of material with onion-skin internal layering. cone - ellipsoidal structure of helically arranged reproductive organs of plants, found in conifers, lycopods and clubmosses coprolite - fossil feces corestone - spheroidally weathered remnant of parent material, least weathered toward the center, and usually within the C horizon of deep weathering profiles cornstone - pedogenic calcium carbonate nodules of paleosols cover slip - thin glass cover glued on top of a petrographic thin section Cretaceous - period of geological time about 146-65 million years ago cross bedding - sedimentary layering that is inclined to regional layering, commonly due to the formation of dunes with slip-faces at an angle to the ground surface crystal chamber - irregular nodular masses of crystals crystallaria - single crystals or groups of crystals in soils crystallinity - degree of perfection of crystal structure, free of defects or other less regular arrangement of chemical constituents crystallite - small crystal, beyond the size resolvable by optical microscopy crystic - a soil microfabric dominated by crystals cuirasse - indurated hardpan or crust exposed at the surface, usually lateritic cumulic horizon - soil horizon that shows bedding or other evidence that it is accumulating in a sedimentary fashion on top of the soil cutan - modified surface within a soil, formed at surface of a ped channel, grain or other feature of the soil cuticle - tough, coating of hydroxy fatty acids and waxes that covers the leaves and other aerial parts of land plants cutinite - a kind of exinite, formed from plant cuticles Cv horizon - C horizon with plinthite decalcification - soil-building process of leaching out carbonate from surface horizons decarboxylation - chemical reaction removing carboxyl radical from organic matter decomposition - decay, or breaking down of organic matter to simpler compounds such as carbon dioxide by decomposer microbes dehydration - chemical reaction involving loss of water or hydroxyl depth unction - common graphical presentation of chemical and petrographic data on soils and paleosols as a plot with one axis the depth from the surface of the profile desert pavement - surface layer of stones, sometimes as closely interlocking as a cobblestone street desert scrub - vegetation of widely scattered thorny shrubs and succulents such as cactus, with patches of bare ground deviatoric - aligned in unpredictable and random directions diagenesis - alteration of sediments after burial but before metamorphism: includes soil formation diaspore - aluminum-rich mineral [AlO(OH)]. diffractogram - plot of the x-ray reflections produced for identification of minerals from an x-ray diffractometer diffusion cutan - cutan formed by concentration at the surface of a material which becomes less prominent away from the surface for example the strong oxidation of the margins but not interior of peds displacive fabric - a soil microfabric in which one mineral (usually calcite) fills cavities opened by the expansion or rotation of large clods of soil or the cracking out of clods or grains dolomite - carbonate mineral (CaMg(CO3)2] domed-columnar ped - ped in the form of a vertically-oriented prism, usually as thick as the whole B horizon and with its upper surface hemispherical: common in salt affected soils drab-haloed root traces - root traces that are surrounded by soil of a gray and often also bluish or greenish color, compared with the yellow to red soil or paleosol away from the root trace duricrust - hard cemented horizon of soil or deep weathering profile, includes laterite, bauxite, calcrete and silcrete duripan - subsurface soil horizon cemented firmly by clay and silica Dystrochrept - kind of Ochrept soil that is very low in weatherable bases ecosystem - the complex of a community and its environment functioning as a unit in nature Eh - electrode potential (usually in millivolts): for soils a measure of the degree of oxidation of the soil. Oxidized soils have a high positive Eh and reduced soils have a low negative Eh. E horizon - soil horizon underlying O or A horizon, characterized by less organic matter, less sesquioxides (Fe2O3 and Al2O3) or less underlying horizon. Its light color is due largely to quartz and feldspar. Also known as an eluvial or albic horizon. eluvial horizon - soil horizon characterized by less organic matter, less sesquioxides (Fe2O3 and Al2O3), or less clay than the underlying horizon. Its light color is due largely to quartz and feldspar endocarp - interior woody part of a seed or fruit coat of plants, also known as a pit or stone, as in cherries and peaches endolithic microrelief - system of surface cavities formed by microbes living within and on rocks endoskeleton - internal skeleton, as in mammals energy dispersive x-ray spectrometry - method of chemical analysis using x-rays emitted from sample in scanning electron microscope (EDAX) Entisol - very weakly developed soils, usually with abundant sedimentary, igneous or metamorphic relicts from their parent material Eocene - epoch of geological time about 57-33 million years ago Ephemeral Stream - A stream that flows only briefly in direct response to rainfall or snowmelt. epidermis - outer covering of cells of a plant or animal estuary - that part of a river mouth that is influenced by marine tides Eutrochrept - kind of Ochrept rich in bases evaporite - sedimentary rock that forms by the accumulation of the evaporation of water, includes rock salt and gypsum exoskeleton - skeleton, as in arthropods extinction angle - angular difference between the orientation of a crystal and the point at which it can no longer transmit polarized light as viewed in petrographic thin section under a microscope, useful for identifying minerals such as feldspars facies - an informal an rock unit, usually designated by features thought to be significant for interpreting sedimentary paleoenvironment factor-function approach - study of environmental control in the expression of soil features, can be used also to infer paleoenvironmental conditions from paleosols fecal pellet - small ovoid to spherical feces produced by small animals feldspar - group of minerals including microcline and plagioclase fen - wetland vegetation of grasses and other herbs with alkaline groundwater ferran - cutan consisting of sesquioxides of iron ferric iron - iron in the Fe3+ valence state, usually within red or yellow minerals or compounds ferrous iron - iron in the Fe2+ valence state, usually within gray to green minerals or compounds ferruginous rhizoconcretion - rhizoconcretion cemented by goethite, hematite or other iron hydroxides or oxides fibric peat - peat with abundant recognizable plant material, not completely decayed Fibrist - kind of Histosol consisting largely of plant remains so little decomposed that their botanical origin can be determined fibrous roots - numerous fine (usually less than 2 mm diameter) roots radiating from the base of a plant, as in palms and grasses fining upwards sequence - sedimentary layer that varies toward smaller grain size from the bottom to the top fireprone shrubland - closely spaced woody shrubs, less than 2 m tall adapted to frequent burning fission tracks - Imperfections in minerals and volcanic glass caused by spontaneous fission of unstable atomic nucleus, which propels energy particles through surrounding material. The density of tracks is a function of numbers of atoms that have undergone fission, and thus also of age. flocculation - aggregation into a coherent mass from fine suspended particles, as can happen to clay particles in turbid water with changes in salinity floodplain - frequently flooded, low lying region flanking large rivers fluorescence - emission of electromagnetic radiation usually as a response to absorption of another form of radiation Fluvent - kind of Entisol, those formed on silt and clay with conspicuous relict bedding fluvial - relating to rivers Folist - kind of Histosol, freely-drained, consisting primarily of organic horizons derived from leaf litter, twigs and branches resting on rock, gravel or boulders, the interstices of which are filled with organic material footslope - lower convex part of a hill slope, between steeper backslope and more level toeslope foraminfer - marine microorganisms that secrete or manufacture a small shell forb - herbaceous plant other than grasses, found typically in rangeland forest - vegetation of closely spaced trees more than 8 m tall formation - The most fundamental local, rock division of stratigraphic classification, which has some distinctive homogeneity of lithology (color, texture, fossil content, etc.); generally named formally for some geographic locality (e.g. John Day Formation for the John Day region of Oregon). fragipan - A hard and brittle subsoil horizon commonly cemented with amorphous silica and/or aluminum. framboid - minute (10 microm to 1 mm diameter) round spherules or groups of spherules of pyrite, usually produced by anaerobic bacteria freeze-thaw banding - structure of cracks and silty seams in pattern of brickwork, produced by frost heaving of soils friable - easy to break into constituent grains: opposite of cemented or indurated ganister - silicified sandstone, commonly containing root traces and underlying a coal seam. These are in most cases paleosol E or eluvial horizons. geothermal gradient - variation in temperature of the Earth with depth into the crust gibbsite - mineral rich in aluminum [Al2(OH)3] gilgai microrelief - soil surface of ridges and swales or potholes produced by the shrinking and swelling of Vertisols glaebule - segregations of materials distinct from other parts of the soil, including nodules, concretions, and septaria gleization - process of gley formation gley - soil that is blue-gray or green-gray colored, strongly mottled or with abundant iron-manganese nodules, usually due to waterlogging, but sometimes produced also by burial glossic features - locally penetrating tongues or tubes of light-colored sandy material deep within a soil profile glycolation - experimental, treatment of clays by exposure to open container of ethylene glycol at 80°C for 4 hours, used to study expansion of smectite clays goethite - yellow to brown iron hydroxide mineral Fe2O3•H2O) graded bed - sedimentary bed that varies in gram size from the bottom to the top of the bed. Normally graded beds are finer grained to the top, and inversely, graded beds are coarser grained toward the top. granotubule - tubular feature of soil filled with clastic grains and little clay granular microfabric - soil microfabric in which skeleton grains are touching with little or fine grained matrix in the interstices granular ped - a form of ped or clod that is small and rounded grassland - vegetation of mainly grasses "Green Clay" - kind of paleosol I found in Precambrian rocks, with unusual combination of indications of deep weathering (corestones, cracks) and gley colors (green gray with chemically reduced iron minerals) groundwater calcrete - calcrete formed by precipitation of carbonate cement from groundwater groundwater gley - gley features formed by the ponding of groundwater from an elevated water table groveland - vegetation of clumps of trees separated by open grassland guano - excrement of birds and bats gypsic horizon - subsurface soil horizon with accumulation of gypsum gypsum - evaporite mineral (CaSO4•2H2O) hackly - having the appearance of something chopped or cut up Haplaquept - typical Aquept, lacking distinguishing features of other kinds of Aquepts Haplohumult - typical Humult, lacking distinguishing features of other kinds of Humults Haplorthod - typical Orthod, lacking distinguishing features of other kinds of Orthod Haploxerand - typical Xerand, lacking an especially dark surface horizon Hapludalf - typical Udalf, lacking distinguishing features of other Hapludoll - typical Udoll, lacking distinguishing features of other kinds of Udolls Haplustalf - typeical Ustalf, lacking distinguishing features of other kinds of Ustalfs Haplustoll - typical Ustoll, lacking distinguishing features of other kinds of Ustolls halite - mineral of desert soils (NaCl) halloysite - hydrated form of kaolinite Harden index - quantitative measure of the degree of soil development, calculated by addition of scores for a variety of soil features thought to vary with time of formation hardpan - A soil horizon cemented with silica, sesquioxides, calcium carbonate or organic matter. hematite - red iron oxide mineral (Fe2O3) hemic peat - peat in which some but not all of the plant material is so decayed as to be unrecognizable Hemist - a kind of Histosoll in which organic matter is decomposed to the extent that as much as two-thirds of the plant material is unidentifiable herbivore - animal that eats plants histic epipedon - peat: a soil surface horizon with at least 18% organic matter if the mineral fraction contains more than 60% clay or 12% organic matter if the mineral fraction has no clay, for a depth of 20 cm. Histosol - soil with peaty surface, which must be at least 40 cm thick if composed mainly of woody material Holocene - epoch of geological time from 10,000 years ago to present hornblende - a mineral of igneous and metamorphic rocks [(Na,K)0-1Ca2(Mg,Fe2+,Fe3+, Al)5Si6-7.5Al2-0.5O22(OH)2] hue - color, such as red, yellow or green, independent of lightness or darkness of the color, in the Munsell system of color classification Humult - kind of Ultisol with a surface horizon rich in organic matter humus - The well-dcomposed, relatively stable part of the organic matter found in aerobic soils. hydrocarbon - compound mainly of hydrogen and carbon, including methane and paraffin hydrolysis - common weathering reaction in soil solutions, converting aluminosilicate minerals to clay and cations in solution hydronium - hydrogen ion (H+) hydrothermal - related to groundwater of elevated temperature, commonly associated with volcanic activity hydroxide - compound including hydroxyl hydroxyl - chemical anion (OH-) ice wedge - vertical wedgelike disruption of a soil filled with horizontally layered material after melting of the ice that created it ichnogenus - formal taxonomic category for a specific kind of trace fossil, similar to a genus of biological classification ICP - inductively-coupled plasma emission spectrometry illite - potassium-rich clay mineral {K1.5-1.0Al4[Si6.5-7.0Al1.5-1.0O20](OH)4} illitization - common process during deep burial that converts smectite clays to illite illuvial horizon - soil horizon enriched in clay by illuviation illuviation - soil building process of enrichment of clay washed in from higher horizons illuviation cutan - cutan formed by washing down of material from higher within a soil impression - form of fossil preservation in which only an outline of the fossil remains with none of the original organic material INAA - instrumental neutron activation analysis Inceptisol - soils with some weathering and incipient development of a variety of different kinds of horizons, but none well-enough developed that the soil could be identified with another order incisor - front tooth of mammals, greatly elongated in rodents indurated - firm, hard, cemented insepic - sepic plasmic fabric with small isolated patches of highly birefringent plasma intercalary crystal - single crystal embedded in soil matrix interstratified clays - clays with crystal layers of differing chemical composition intertextic - soil microfabric in which skeleton grains are more prominent than fine grained matrix, which forms intergranular braces and fills local pockets inundulic - soil microfabric similar to undulic, but cloudy, with large irregular isotropic patches which appear dark when viewed under crossed nicols isotic - soil microfabric that is dark when viewed under crossed nicols because either isotropic, like opal, or opaque, like hematite isotope - alternative forms of a chemical element that differ slightly in mass and sometimes also in other properties. Common isotopes of carbon are the very heavy radiogenic isotope 14C used for carbon dating, and the stable isotopes 13C and 12C. isotopic dating - Mineral or rock dating using radioactive isotopes. Radioactive isotopes decay at constant rates therefore the ratio of daughter isotope to its unstable parent determines how long the radioactive parent has been in the mineral or rock. isotropic mineral - a mineral whose crystal structure shows no preferred orientations: appears black in thin section under cross polarized light isotubule - tubular feature of soil filled with mixed clay and clastic grains without any preferred orientation Jacob staff - survey pole used for taking angular differences in elevation and horizontal differences in distance with clinometer jarosite - powdery, yellow mineral smelling of rotten eggs [KFe3(OH6)(SO4)2], forms by oxidative weathering of pyrite kandic horizon - subsurface soil horizon similar to argillic horizon in clay enrichment, but clays are kaolinitic and there are very few weatherable minerals remaining kaolinite - base-poor clay mineral {Al4{Si4O14](OH)8} karst - landform formed from the weathering and dissolution of limestone, often rugged with caves and pinnacles karst bauxite - kind of bauxite formed within depressions of karst landscapes kerogen - particulate organic matter lacking regular chemical structure and insoluble in organic solvents and mineral acids, present in sedimentary rocks K horizon - subsurface soil horizon so impregnated with carbonate that its morphology is determined by the carbonate. Authigenic carbonate coats or engulfs all primary grains in a continuous medium and makes up 50% or more by volume of the horizon. The uppermost part of the horizon commonly is laminated. If cemented, the horizon corresponds with some caliches and calcretes. krotovina - tubular feature in a soil filled with material from a higher soil horizon Kubler index - measure of clay crystallinity using the width of x-ray diffractometer peaks kunkar - pedogenic calcium carbonate nodules or layers labile minerals - minerals such as olivine and pyroxene that are relatively easily weathered lacustrine - relating to lakes larval cell - chamber used for rearing young in the complex nests of social insects such as termites, bees and ants laterite - highly weathered material rich in iron, and poor in humus, silica and bases lattisepic - sepic plasmic fabric with a network of highly birefringent streaks in two preferred directions that are at a right angle lentil ped - soil clods that are shaped like an elongate parallellogram, usually with slickensided faces and characteristic of Vertisols lessivage - soil-building process of washing down of clay into subsurface cracks lichen - plantlike organism formed by the symbiotic association of fungi and algae ligament - tough tissue that connects bones or supports internal organs of animals lime - calcium oxide (CaO) limestone - rock formed mainly of calcite linear gilgai - gilgai microrelief of elongate ridges and swales, usually running downslope lithic sandstone - sandstone whose clasts are mainly rock fragments lithofunction - mathematical relationship between soil features and parent material of the soil lithorelict - rock fragment in a soil remaining from its parent material lithosequence - set of soils formed under similar climate, vegetation, topographic setting and time, but varying parent material litter - accumulation of leaves, wood and other decaying organic matter on the surface of soil loess - deposits of wind-blown glacial dust macronutrients - elements needed in large amounts for the nourishment of plants, including hydrogen (H), carbon (C), nitrogen (N), oxygen (0), magnesium (Mg), phosphorus (P), sulfur (S), potassium and calcium (Ca) magnesia - magnesium oxide (MgO) magnetite - an iron-rich mineral [Fe2+Fe3+2O4] mangal - vegetation consisting of mangroves mangan - cutan consisting of oxides or hydroxides of iron and manganese mangrove - tree capable of living within the intertidal zone of the ocean maquis - synonym of fireprone shrublands, used mainly for vegetation around the Mediterranean Sea marsh - wetland vegetation of grasses and other herbs with acidic to neutral groundwater masepic - sepic plasmic fabric with highly birefringent streaks forming an extensive criss-crossing network megaspore - large (usually more than 60 microm diameter) spores of some kinds of ferns, lycopods and similar plants member - Formal stratigraphic subdivisions of formations. mesa - hill with a flat top metaranotubule - tubular feature in a soil filled with sandy material from a higher soil horizon metamorphism - alteration of rocks during deep burial and heating, generally to more than 200°C or greater than 7 km, whichever comes first metasediment - metamorphosed sedimentary rock metatubule - tubular feature of soil filled with material different from soil matrix and derived from some other soil horizon micrite - very fine grained sediment of calcite and clay minerals micritization - soil forming process whereby coarsely crystalline calcite or other materials are converted to micrite microarthropod - microscopic arthropod, including springtails and mites microbe - microscopic organism microbial earth - vegetation of microbes living on and within a friable soil microfabric - arrangement of constituents visible by microscopy Milankovitch effect - Cyclic change of temperature of the earths surface due to combined effects of variations in the tilt of axis, wobble of axis (p recession), and ellipticity of the orbits. mineral - Naturally occuring chemical element or compound with a definite composition, a characteristic crystal form, and other distinctive physical properties. ministromatolite - small (often microscopic) domed structure with internal lamination, formed by the growth of microbial colonies Miocene - epoch of geological time about 23-5 million years ago moderately developed soil or paleosol - with surface rooted zone and obvious subsu ace clayey, sesquioxidic, humic or calcareous or surface organic horizons, qualifying as argillic, spodic or calcic horizons or Histosol and developed at least to the extent of nodules for calcic horizons moder humus - organic matter consisting of a mix of recognizable plant material and other organic material completely decayed: intermediate between mor and mull humus moisture equivalent - percentage moisture in a soil at "field capacity", which is the point at which water is no longer moving through or filling soil pores, but bound in immobile films to grains and roots mole - mass in grams of Avogadro's number (6.022x1023) of atoms or molecules of an element of compound, calculated by dividing weight percent of analyzed element or compound by its atomic weight molecular weathering ratio - ratio of chemical constituents in moles, calculated in order to understand changing chemical proportions due to weathering mollic epipedon - soil surface horizon of grassland soils, with fine structure (usually granular peds), dark color (chroma of 3 or less, value darker than 5 when dry), contains at least 1% organic matter (0.58% organic carbon), and has a base saturation of over 50% Mollisol - grassland soil with a mollic epipedon at least 18 cm thick monsoonal climate - climate of very marked seasonal rain fall, as in the Indian subcontinent mor humus - organic material consisting of little decayed plant material, such as the dried pine needles commonly preserved under conifer forest mosepic - sepic plasmic fabric with partly adjoining highly birefringent streaks mottle - glaebules of very irregular shade and diffuse boundaries, usually expressed as different ore areas of soil mucigel - gelatinous zone within the rhizosphere, rich in bacteria and fungi mudflow - rapid downslope movement of a slurry of mud and boulders after rain storms or volcanic eruptions mukkara structure - subsurface deformation of soil horizons, usually with the surface horizon festooned between ridges of exposed cracked subsurface horizon, produced by shrinking and swelling of Vertisols mull humus - organic matter decayed so that plant structure is no longer visible, as in the surface horizon of grassland soils or Mollisols murram - loose aggregate of pea-sized lateritic gravel used for road building natric horizon - soil subsurface horizon more than 15% saturated with exchangeable sodium, commonly also with salts and prismatic or domed columnar peds Natrustoll - kind of Ustoll, with abundant sodium or other indications of salt accumulation such as domed-columnar peds needle fiber calcite - calcite crystals in the form of microscopic needles, commonly precipitated by soil fungi neocutan - altered area within a soil at a surface as well as some distance in from the surface. These are unusually thick cutans. neoferran - neocutan of iron oxides of hydroxides neomorphism - change in form of crystals, including recrystallization neutron activation analysis - method of chemical analysis using radiation induced after neutron irradiation in a nuclear reactor nicols - polarizing light filters on a petrographic microscope Nitosol - Ultisol or Oxisol with abundant slickensided clay skins in the F.A.O. soil classification nodule - glaebule with an undifferentiated, massive internal fabric. These are usually local hard, cemented lumps of soil material. normal fault - Fault along which the upper block has moved down relative to the lower block along a steeply inclined surface; characteristic of crust that has been subjected to tension. normative mineral composition - estimate of the proportions of minerals present in a specimen calculated from the chemical composition of the specimen and ideal compositions of the minerals Ochrept - kind of Inceptisol with ochric and cambic horizons, and sometimes also, poorly developed calcic horizons, fragipans or duripans. ochric epipedon - soil surface horizon too light in color and low in organic matter to be mollic or umbric. O horizon - surface accumulation of organic material overlying mineral soil Oligocene - epoch of geological time about 33-23 million years oligotrophic forest - forest living in low nutrient soil such as a Sodosol olivine - a mineral of igneous rocks {Mg,Fe)2[SiO4]} omnisepic - sepic plasmic fabric dominated by highly birefringent, oriented plasma, with a "woven" appearance omnivore - animal that eats meat and plants ooid - small (1-2 mm diameter) round grain with internal concentric structure opal - silica mineral (SiO2•nH2O) opalite - silica cemented shale or claystone opaque - not pervious to light, and so black when viewed in a petrographic thin section optical axis figure - arrangement of light interference bands seen when minerals are viewed in particular orientations within petrographic thin sections and useful for mineral identification organan - cutan consisting of organic matter Orthent - kind of Entisol, formed on erosional remnants such that hard bedrock, or relict soil material, is within 25 cm of the surface Orthid - kind of Aridisol, lacking an argillic horizon Orthod - kind of Spodosol, with a subsurface horizon including both sesquioxides and organic matter orthotubule - tubular feature of soil filled with material of very similar fabric and composition to soil matrix oxidation - chemical reaction in which electrons are lost to valence of elements with multiple valence states, for example Fe2+ to Fe3+, which commonly is achieved by means of oxygen as a electron sink oxic horizon - highly weathered subsurface horizon characterized by hydrated oxides of iron and aluminum, 1:1 lattice clays, and low cation-exchange capacity. Few primary silicate minerals remain with the exception of quartz, which is quite resistant to weathering. oxidized groundwater - water within soils and rocks that is rich in oxygen. Oxidizing groundwaters are rare, and largely found within actively-recharged, sandy aquifers, because of oxygen scavenging by microbes and by minerals Oxisol - deeply weathered soils with kaolinitic clays, quartz and few weatherable minerals oxygen-isotope analysis - Ration of 18O to 16O in shells composed of CaCO3 provides indication of paleotemperature of seawater when the shell was formed. Paleocene - epoch of geological time about 65-57 million years ago paleochannel - former river channel, usually marked by an elongate deposit broadly lenticular in cross section, of cross bedded sandstone or conglomerate paleoecology - study of the ecology of fossil organisms paleomagnetism - former orientation of Earth's magnetic field as recorded in magnetic minerals in rocks paleopedology - study of paleosols paleosol - soil of a landscape of the past: a surficial region of a planet or similar body altered in place by biological, chemical or physical processes, or a combination of these Paleudalf - kind of Udalf that is very strongly developed, usually over a long period of time (hundreds of thousands of years) Paleudult - kind of Udult that is very strongly developed, usually over a long period of time (hundreds of thousands of years) Paleustalf - kind of Ustalf that is very strongly developed, commonly with a continuous subsurface calcareous horizon pallid zone - horizon of white clay and bleached or mottled rock beneath laterite in a deep weathering profile palygorskite - mineral of desert soils [(OH2)4Mg5Si8O20•4H2O] pampas - synonym of grassland, used mainly in South America papule - glaebule of clay, a useful non-genetic term if one is not sure whether they are clay galls of the original parent material, void fills or segregations of clay paratubule - tubular feature of soil filled with material different from soil matrix and unlike anything else within the profile parent material - Initial material of a soil. parkland - vegetation of woodland with numerous large grassy clearings ped - natural aggregate of soil; that is, stable lumps or clods of soil between cracks, roots, burrows or other planes of weakness pediment - An erosion surface formed by the retreat of an escarpment. pedofacies - kind of sedimentary facies containing one or more paleosols and dominated by pedogenic features such as nodules, mottles and root traces pedogenic - formed in association with soil pedolith - sedimentary deposit composed of clasts that are clearly derived from soils, such as talus slopes of lateritic clasts below a laterite scarp pedon - A single soil profile in a landscape; it is the smallest soil descriptive unit. pedorelict - soil structure that formed in a different soil than the one in which it is found, for example a calcareous nodule within the gravelly parent material of a non-calcareous soil pedotubule - tubular features of soils, including roots and burrows pedotype - reference profile for definition of a soil or paleosol mapping unit pegmatite - coarsely crystalline rock mainly of quatz and feldspar, usually forming veins within granitic rocks peg root - short, bluntly-ending roots that protrude from the ground, as in mangroves Pennsylvanian - period of geological time about 323-290 million years ago perched water table - level of water ponded in soil by an impermeable subsurface layer peridotite - rock formed mainly of olivine periostracum - outer, thin, brown organic layer covering the shells of some molluscs, such as snails and freshwater clams Permian - period of geological time about 290-250 million years ago permineralized - infiltrated with cementing minerals, as in the silica that fills woody cell contents to create permineralized wood. Such wood is often incorrectly referred to as petrified, but the cellulose cell walls remain, and have not been turned to stone. petrocalcic horizon - subsurface soil horizon cemented firmly with calcium carbonate petroferric horizon - subsurface soil horizon cemented firmly with iron oxides and hydroxides petrography - description of rocks, usually including study in thin section petrogypsic horizon - subsurface soil horizon cemented firmly with gypsum pH - negative logarithm of the activity of the hydronium ion (H+): soils a measure of acidity. Acidic soils have a low pH (<7) and alkaline soils have a high pH (>7), with a total observed range of 4.5-11, from a theoretical 1-14. phenocryst - large crystals in a prophritic rock phytolith - mineral particle made by a plant, such as opal bodies of grasses pisolite - spherical concretions usually about 2 to 15 mm in diameter. plagioclase - mineral of igneous rocks [Na(AlSi3O8)Ca(AlSi3O8)] plasma - fine grained material of soil microfabric, making up peds, including amorphous clay and iron stain platy ped - form of ped that is thin but wide, often formed by weathering of sedimentary layers playa lake - desert basin, rarely inundated, usually dry and covered in salt and clay Pleistocene - epoch of geological time about 1.6 million to 10,000 years ago plinthite - iron-rich, humus-poor clayey part of a soil, usually mottled red and yellow, and with the distinctive property of hardening irreversibly to an iron hardpan upon drying. This term is used or those kinds of laterites that are found within soil Pliocene - epoch of geological time about 5 to 1.6 million years ago podzolization - soil building process of acidic leaching into subsurface horizon of sesquioxides, organic matter or combinations of these point-counting - systematic search and record of grain type or size made to determine mineral composition or grain size of paleosols polygenetic Soil - A soil that has been formed by two or more different and contrasting processes so that the horizons are not genetically related. porcellanous - with the appearance of china or porcelain porosity - percent void space between grains and peds of soil; complement to solidity porphyritic - crystalline texture of large crystals isolated within a fine grrained matrix poyroskelic - soil microfabric in which grains are dispersed fine grained matrix, like phenocrysts in a porphyritic rock potash - potassium oxide ([K2O]) prairie - synonym of grassland, used mainly for vegetation in North America temperatures of about pressure solution - process of dissolution of grains of rock by the pressures of deep burial focused at grain contacts primary porosity - proportion of void space between grains and peds in the original soil or sediment profile - A vertical section through a soil from the surface into the relatively unaltered material. productivity - a measure of biological accumulation of organic matter, measured as grams of carbon or of dry organic matter per meter per year "Protorendzina" - weakly developed soil with mollic surface horizon on limestone bedrock Psamment - kind of Entisol, formed on sand, especially eolian dunes, with relict bedding pseudoanticline - uparched bedding planes that are confined to a particular layer, and so thought to be due to local clay heave or crystallization rather than regional folding that produces anticlines pseudomorph - mineral grain that has adopted the form of another mineral, usually as a result of replacement of that mineral, for example, chalcedony pseudomorphs of gypsum pseudomycelium - fine irregular filaments of calcium carbonate in soil ptygmatic - folded back on itself in a complex way pyrite - common mineral of mangal and salt marsh soils (FeS2) pyroxene - mineral of igneous rocks {(Mg,Fe)Si2O6} quartz - common mineral of soils (SiO2) quasicutan - altered area within a soil that is thick and shows a relationship to a surface, but is not right at the surface. Quasicutans form a kind of halo following the outline peds, grains and other features. quasimangan - quasicutan of iron-manganese Quaternary - period of geological time from 1.6 million years ago to present radiogenic - prone to decay with the release of radioactivity rain forest - forest living in a very humid climate rangeland - region of open vegetation, including wooded grassland, grassland and desert scrub rare earth elements - elements with atomic number 57-71, also known as lanthanides, of which lanthanum (La), cerium (Ce), neodymium (Nd), samarium (Sm), europium (Eu), gadolinium (Gd), ytterbium (Yb), and lutetium (Lu) are commonly analyzed in rocks and soils recrystallization - process of forming new crystals without a change in chemical composition red beds - sediments or sedimentary rocks that are largely red in color reddening - change in color from brownish red (Munsell 10YR) to brick red (Munsell 5R) that occurs during soil formation and during burial of soils reductant - chemical compound capable of inducing reduction reduction - a chemical reaction in which electrons are donated to change the valence of elements with multiple valence states, for example converting ferric iron (Fe3+) to ferrous iron (Fe2+) REE - rare earth elements regolith - The unconsolidated mantle of weathered rock, soil and superficial deposits overlying solid rock. relict structures - features persisting in soil from its parent material, including bedding, crystalline structure and schishosity relief - degree to which the margins of a mineral grain stand out from its surroundings as viewed in thin section under a microscope Rendoll - kind of Mollisol formed on limestone bedrock replacive fabric - microfabric of soils in which one mineral is converted incompletely and over an irregular front into another mineral residuum - material remaining after a long period of weathering resistate minerals - minerals such as quartz and microcline that are resistant to weathering and tend to persist as other minerals are destroyed in soils respiration - metabolic process of organisms, whereby organic food is converted into energy and carbon dioxide reverse fault - Fault along which the upper block has moved down relative to the lower block; characteristic of crust that has been subjected to compression. R horizon - consolidated or weathered bedrock underlying the soil rhizoconcretion - concretion that forms by cementation of soil around a root rhizoid - elongated epidermal cell that functions as a root, as in mosses, liverworts and primitive land plants rhizome - a rootlike structure of plants which lies along or within the ground, but which is really a stem, as revealed anatomically and in its pattern of branching and budding rizosphere - area of influence a root in the soil rhyolite - silica rich volcanic rock ripple mark - sedimentary structure of small scale undulations of a bedding plane: miniature dunelike forms produced by wind or water currents rock varnish - thin crust of red to black iron and manganese oxides and clay formed on the surface of rocks in deserts, lakes and streams, largely as a result of microbial activity root - branching subterranean structure of plants, often with some woody internal thickening root hair - elongate cell erect on the surface of roots, most common a short distance behind the growing tip of roots. rootlet - side branch from roots. root trace - tubular cavity or irregular marking left in soils and paleosols by roots, recognized by irregular tubular shape, tapering downwards branching downward or outward from a center, and (for deeply buried paleosols) concertina-like shape due to compaction of surrounding sediment around the main lateral rootlets saccharoidal - like sugar crystals salic horizons - subsurface soil horizon with accumulations of salt salinized - affected by salt accumulation Salorthid - kind of desert soil or Aridisol, which has salts such as gypsum within the profile and lacks a subsurface horizon of clay enrichment salt marsh - wetland vegetation of grasses and other herbs with saline groundwater, usually within the intertidal zone of bays sand crystal - sand cemented into the shape of a crystal of cementing material, usually gypsum sand wedge - vertically oriented wedgelike disruption of a soil filled with vertically banded sediments from opening and closing with freezing and thawing sapric peat - peat in which organic matter has decayed to such an extent that little if any of the original plant components are recognizable Saprist - kind of Histosol, consisting mainly of decomposed and unrecognizable plant mattes saprolite - less altered lower portion of weathering profiles, showing some weathering, but much relict bedding, schistosity or crystalline structure remaining from parent material savanna - commonly used as a synonym of wooded grassland, but also widely taken to include grassy woodland scanning electron microscope - microscope that uses electron beams to create images schist - metamorphic rock of clay grain size showing pronounced schistosity schistosity - degree of development of planes of fissility and foliation characteristic of fine rained metamorphic rocks sclerotia - rounded, woody bodies, with interlaced, elongate, hollows produced by the resting stages of fungi secondary porosity - a system of tubes and vesicles developed in rock during deep burial associated with maturation of buried organic matter sedimentary facies - Overall lithology of strata reflecting environment of deposition; characteristics of one environment such as beach sand, grade laterally into facies of another environment. SEM - scanning electron microscope sepic plasmic fabric - appearance of soil thin sections viewed under cross-polarized light of wisps or streaks of highly oriented and highly birefringent clay in a less organized dark matrix: a characteristic micro fabric of soils sepiolite - mineral of desert soils [(OH2)4Mg5Si12O30·8H2O] septarium (plural septaria) - glaebule with a complex system of internal cracks, usually due to shrinkage sesquan - cutan consisting of sesquioxides of iron and aluminum sesquioxides - alumina (Al2O3) and ferric iron (FeO3) shrubland - vegetation of low-growing woody shrubs, such as sagebrush and saltbush siderite - carbonate mineral of waterlogged and organic rich soils (FeCO3) silan - cutan consisting of silica silasepic - soil microfabric dominated by silt and sand grains, and lacking highly birefringent streaks when viewed under crossed nicols silcrete - a silica cemented material associated with weathering profiles silica - silicon dioxide (SiO2) siliceous - composed mainly of silica silicified - cemented by silica sinker - deeply-penetrating large root, that takes advantage of deep groundwater sinter - silica-rich, often vuggy, deposits formed around volcanic hot springs skeletan - cutan consisting of clastic grains such as quartz or feldspar skeleton grains - clastic grains such as quartz and feldspar within the soil microfabric skeletonized leaf - plant leaf decayed in such a way that cuticle and soft tissues have been removed to reveal the woody vascular traces or veins skelsepic - sepic plasmic fabric with highly birefringent plasma associated with the outer surface of skeleton grains slickenside - smooth to striated surface of a rock produced by shearing within soils, during burial crushing of soil peds and during faulting slide - small glass pane used for supporting thin section of rock or soil smectite - a base-rich clay mineral {1/2Ca,Na)0.7(Al,Mg,Fe)4-6[(Si,Al)8O20](OH)4•nH2O} soil - The subaerial surface of the earth; a membrane between the lithosphere and atmosphere. soil creep - downslope movement of hillside soils, as revealed by bending into the surface of near vertical veins and bedding planes soil horizons - gradational changes in texture or mineral content down into parent material of a soil or paleosol from the truncated land surface soil structure - three dimensional features characteristic of soils solidity - percent solid grains or ped in a soil: complement to porosity soluan - cutan consisting of soluble salts such as gypsum or calcite solum - altered upper part of a weathering profile, including the various named soil horizons sparry calcite - calcite crystals large enough to be discernable under an optical microscope spherical microped - microscopic sphere-shaped soil clod, typical of tropical soils and produced as oral and fecal pellets of termites spherulite - spherical aggregate of radiating crystals spicule - small pointed mineral body made by an animal as part of its skeletal support, such as the opal bodies of freshwater sponges spodic horizon - subsurface soil horizon formed by concentration of organic matter and sesquioxides that have been translocated downward from an E horizon Spodosol - acidic sandy soil with B horizons enriched in organic matter, iron and aluminum or combinations of these, but not clay sporinite - kind of exinite coal maceral, formed from spores and pollen standard error - measure of the variation of a set of data points around a mean value or fitted curve, defined as the square root of variance after division by the number of data points stele - central conducting strand of tracheids or xylem found within roots and stems of plants steppe - synonym of grassland, used mainly for grasslands of Asia stoichiometry - measurement of proportions of components for conservation of matter and energy in chemical equations and formulae stone line - layer of pebbles or other large rock fragments confined to a narrow horizon, commonly an erosional plane, and conspicuous as the only large clasts in an otherwise one grained soil stratovolcano - steep volcanic cone constructed by successive layers of ash and lava stratigraphic sequences - Intervals of conformable strata bounded by unconformities. stream terrace - Former level of a broad valley floor that was created by aggradation or by lateral fluvial erosion, but now is above the present floodplain because of incision by the stream. A terrace consists of a tread and a riser, which separates the tread from the stream or a lower terrace. stress cutan - cutan formed by differential forces within the soil such as shearing due to swelling and shrinking induced by wetting and drying striotubule - tubular feature of soil filled with mixed clay and clastic grains with curved internal layering strongly developed soil or paleosol - with especially thick (2-3 m), sea, clayey or humic subsurface (B) horizons or surface organic horizons (coal or lignites) or especially well developed soil structure or calcic horizons as a continuous layer subcutanic features - modifications of soil material that show a relationship to a surface, but do not occur only at that surface Sulfaquent - kind of Aquent with common sulfur minerals such as pyrite or jarosite, commonly formed under salt marsh and mangal vegetation Sulfaquept - kind of Aquept with common sulfur minerals such as pyrite or jarosite, commonly formed under salt marsh and mangal vegetation sulfate - common anion (SO42-) in soils, found in minerals such as gypsum surface water gley - gley features formed by the ponding of water by impermeable soil layers above drier subsoil swale - local elongate depression on the landscape, typically from abandoned flood channels swamp - wetland vegetation of trees with acidic to neutral ground water tap root - single, thick, vertical root, like that of a carrot taxonomic uniformitarianism - assumption that soil types of the past formed under similar environmental conditions to taxonomically similar soils of the present taxonomy - classification: for soils, used to distinguish the soil classification of the U.S. Soil Conservation Service (originally entitled "Soil Taxonomy") from other classifications telinite - kind of vitrinite coal maceral, formed from wood fragments with some crushed, cellular structure remaining tepee structure - inverted V-shaped local disruption of layering within a bed, due to action of roots or clay swelling terrace - flat geomorphic surface representing the erosional remnant of a former land surface Tertiary - period of geological time about 65-1.6 million years ago thin section - transparent slice of rock or soil mounted between glass covers, used for microscopic examination topofunction - mathematical relationship between soil features and topographic setting of soil toposequence - set of soils formed under similar climate, vegetation, parent material and time, but varying topographic setting Torrand - kind of Andisol of very dry climate, with little clay or colloidal material, and abundant salts and carbonate at shallow levels within the profile. Torrox - kind of Oxisol of very dry climates trace fossil - fossilized evidence of the activity of an organism, such as a fossil footprint or burrow trachyte - volcanic intrusive and flow rock close to saturation with silica, consisting mainly of alkali feldspar transform fault - A lateral or strike-slip fault characteristic of spreading ridges, which offsets the ridge axes as spreading progresses. transpiration - evaporative by loss of water from leaves of plants trimasepic - sepic plasmic fabric with a network of highly birefringent streaks in threep referred directions Tropept - kind of Inceptisol found in intertropical regions. tuber - potatolike underground storage organ of plants Udifluvent - kind of Entisol, discernably decalcified and with clear relict bedding remaining from clayey alluvial parent material Udalf - kind of Alfisol formed in a humid climate, usually non-calcareous Udoll - kind of Mollisol formed in a humid climate, usually non-calcareous Udult - kind of Ultisol formed in a humid climate, so deeply weathered and non-calcareous Ultisol - acidic, deeply weathered forest soil, with clayey, ferric, aluminous or humic subsurface horizon umbric epipedon - soil surface horizon similar to mollic except for platy to massive structure and base saturation less than 50%. They are generally associated with forest vegetation unconformity - major temporal break in the accumulation of a sedimentary rock sequence, as indicated by fossils as evidence of age or by deformation of underlying layers before deposition of overlying layers underclay - clayey paleosol beneath a coal seam undulic - soil micro fabric that is almost but not quite isotropic, so very dark when viewed in thin section under crossed nicols Ustalf - kind of Alfisol of dry summer-wet climates Ustand - kind of Andisol of dry summer-wet climates Ustochrept - kind of Ochrept formed in a dry climate, usually with carbonate nodules Ustoll - kind of Mollisol of dry summer-wet climates Ustox - kind of Oxisol of seasonally dry climates Ustropept - kind of Tropept formed in a dry climate valley calcrete - form of groundwater calcrete formed by precipitation from the water table near streams value - the degree of lightness of a color in the Munsell system of color classification vein - a narrow crack through rock, commonly filled with minerals such as quartz or calcite vermicular - wormy, full of elongate cavities vertic - showing some properties of Vertisols, such as slickensides and deep cracks Vertisol - thick, very clayey, slickensided soil, often with internal deformation of horizons very strongly developed - with unusually thick (3 or more m) subsurface (B) horizons or surface horizons (coal or lignites): such a degree of development is found mainly at major geological unconformities very weakly developed soil or paleosol - with little evidence of soil development apart from root traces and abundant sedimentary, metamorphic or igneous textures remaining from parent material vesicular - full of small, near-spherical cavities Vitrand - kind of Andisol rich in glassy volcanic shards vitrinite reflectance - measure of the shininess of the coal maceral vitrinite, the percentage of light reflected from the maceral vitrain - bright coal: brilliant, black, non-laminated coal, clean to the touch and breaking with conchoidal fracture vivianite - blue to white mineral of marsh soils [Fe3(PO4)2&busll;8H2O] void - small open spaces within soil microfabric, generally crushed out of buried paleosols volatile matter - easily moved materials: for coal, volatile material includes water, sulfur and nitrogen volcanic arc - An arcuate chain of volcanic islands or volcanoes which erupt mainly andesitic lavas and ash but also including basalts and rhyolites; generally associated with trenches, seismicity and subduction. volcanic ash - particles of volcanic sock, crystals and glass that settle out through the atmosphere after volcanic eruptions volcaniclastic - formed from particles of volcanic rock vosepic - sepic plasmic fabric with highly birefringent plasma associated with the walls of voids. May be difficult to recognize in paleosols with voids crushed during burial vug - small unfilled cavity in rock or soil Walkley-Black method - wet chemical titration method for the determination of abundance (weight percent) of soil organic carbon waterlogged soil - soil that is saturated with water water potential - negative water pressure maintained within tracheids that transports water through a plant weakly developed soil or paleosol - with a surface rooted zone (A horizon), as well as incipient subsurface clayey, calcareous, sesquioxidic or humic or surface organic horizons, but none of these developed to the extent that they would qualify as argillic, spodic or calcic horizons or histic epipedons weathering rind - thin outer zone of weathering found on rock and mineral grains within a soil. Weaver index - measure of clay crystallinity using height of x-ray diffractometer peak Weber index - measure of clay crystallinity using width of x-ray diffractometer peak of clay compared with that of quartz wetland - part of the landscape that is waterlogged or inundated for a substantial part of the year wooded grassland - trees giving 10-40% cover, isolated and scattered among grasses wooded shrub land - trees giving 10-40% cover, isolated and scattered among grasses woodland - vegetation of closely spaced trees 2-8 m tall Xeralf - a kind of Alfisol of dry winter-wet climates Xerand - a kind of Andisol of dry winter-wet climates xeric - of dry winter-wet climates Xeroll - kind of Mollisol of dry winter-wet climates x-ray diffractometer - machine used to identify mineral by the angles at which their crystal faces reflect a focused beam of x-rays x-ray fluorescence spectrometry - method of chemical analysis using wavelengths of secondary radiation.
joda/bestland-retallack1/glossary.htm Last Updated: 21-Aug-2007 |