Results for paleosol
On this page:
 
Dictionary:

paleosol

  ('lē-ə-sôl', -sŏl') pronunciation
n.

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.


 
Wikipedia: paleosol
Paleosols sequence, Tuscany, Italy
Enlarge
Paleosols sequence, Tuscany, Italy

In soil science, paleosols (palaeosols in Great Britain and Australia) can have two meanings. The first meaning, is simply that of a former soil preserved by burial underneath either sediments (alluvium or loess) or volcanic deposits (Volcanic ash), which in case of older deposits, have lithified into rock. In Quaternary geology, sedimentology, paleoclimatology, and geology in general, it is the typical and accepted practice to use the term "paleosol" to designate such "fossil" soils found buried within either sedimentary or volcanic deposits exposed in all continents as illustrated by Rettallack (2001), Kraus (1999), and innumerable other published papers and books.

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 cratons and as small scattered localities in outliers of ancient rock. Because of the changes in the Earth's climate over the last fifty million years, soils formed under tropical rainforest (or even savanna) have became exposed to increasingly arid climates which cause former Oxisols, Ultisols or even Alfisols to dry out in such a manner that a very hard crust is formed. This process has occurred so extensively in most parts of Australia as to restrict soil development - the former soil is effectively the parent material for a new soil, but it is so unweatherable that only a very poorly developed soil can exist in present dry climates, especially when they have become much drier during glacial periods in the Quaternary.

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 podsols in quite dry climates in the far southern inland of Australia (where temperate rainforest was formerly dominant) and to the formation of Torrox soils in southern Africa. Here, present climates allow, effectively, the maintenance of the old soils under climates which they could not actually form if one were to start with the parent material on which they developed in the Mesozoic and Paleocene.

Paleosols in this sense are always exceedingly infertile soils, containing available phosphorus levels orders of magnitude lower than in temperate regions with younger soils. Ecological studies have shown that this has forced highly specialised evolution amongst Australian flora (Tim F. Flannery, The Future Eaters: An Ecological History of the Australian Lands and People; published 1994 by George Braziller) to obtain minimal nutrient supplies. The fact that soil formation is simply not occurring makes ecologically sustainable management even more difficult. However, paleosols often contain the most exceptional biodiversity due to the absence of competition (David Tilman; Resource Competition And Community Structure; published 1982 by Princeton University Press).

References

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.

See also

External links

Commission on Paleopedology of the International Union of Soil Science, Subcommission on Paleopedology of the International Union for Quaternary Research


 
 

Join the WikiAnswers Q&A community. Post a question or answer questions about "paleosol" at WikiAnswers.

 

Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Sci-Tech Encyclopedia. McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Science and Technology. Copyright © 2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Paleosol" Read more

Search for answers directly from your browser with the FREE Answers.com Toolbar!  
Click here to download now. 

Get Answers your way! Check out all our free tools and products.

On this page:   E-mail   print Print  Link  

 

Keep Reading

Mentioned In: