A layer of fossilized soil, usually buried beneath layers of rock or more recent soil horizons.
[New Latin : paleo- + Latin solum, soil.]
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A layer of fossilized soil, usually buried beneath layers of rock or more recent soil horizons.
[New Latin : paleo- + Latin solum, soil.]
A soil of the past, that is, a fossil soil. Paleosols are most easily recognized when they are buried by sediments. They also include surface profiles that are thought to have formed under very different conditions from those now prevailing, such as the deeply weathered tropical soils of Tertiary geological age that are widely exposed in desert regions of Africa and Australia. Such profiles are generally known as relict paleosols. Those that can be shown to have been buried and then uncovered by erosion are known as exhumed paleosols. The main problem in defining the term paleosol comes from defining what is meant by soil, a term that has very different meanings for agronomists, engineers, geologists, and soil scientists. Soil can be considered distinct from sediment in that it forms in place, but soil need not necessarily include traces of life. At its most general level, soil is material forming the surface of a planet or similar body and altered in place from its parent material by physical, chemical, or biological processes. See also Soil.
Paleosols are especially abundant in volcanic, alluvial, and eolian sedimentary sequences. Along with the fossils, sedimentary structures, and volcanic rocks found in such deposits, paleosols provide an additional line of evidence for ancient environments during times between eruptions and depositional events. See also Paleoclimatology; Sedimentology.
In soil science, paleosols (palaeosols in
More generally in soil science, paleosols are soils formed long periods ago that
have no relationship in their chemical and physical characteristics to the present-day climate or vegetation. Such soils form on
extremely old contimental
In other parts of Australia, and in many parts of Africa, drying out of former soils has not
been so severe. This has led to large areas of relict
Paleosols in this sense are always exceedingly infertile
Retallack, G.J., 2001, Soils of the Past, 2nd ed. New York, Blackwell Science. ISBN 0-632-05376-3
Kraus, M.J., 1999, Paleosols in clastic sedimentary rocks: their geologic applications, Earth Science Review 47:41-70.
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