Inceptisols in the context of Aluminium oxide


Inceptisols in the context of Aluminium oxide

Inceptisols Study page number 1 of 1

Play TriviaQuestions Online!

or

Skip to study material about Inceptisols in the context of "Aluminium oxide"


⭐ Core Definition: Inceptisols

Inceptisols are a soil order in USDA soil taxonomy. They form quickly through alteration of parent material. They are more developed than Entisols. They have no accumulation of clays, iron oxide, aluminium oxide or organic matter. They have an ochric or umbric horizon and a cambic subsurface horizon.

In the World Reference Base for Soil Resources (WRB), most Inceptisols are Cambisols or Umbrisols. Some may be Nitisols. Many Aquepts belong to Gleysols and Stagnosols.

↓ Menu
HINT:

In this Dossier

Inceptisols in the context of Gley soil

A gleysol or gley soil is a hydric soil that unless drained is saturated with groundwater for long enough to develop a characteristic gleyic colour pattern. The pattern is essentially made up of reddish, brownish, or yellowish colours at surfaces of soil particles and/or in the upper soil horizons mixed with greyish/blueish colours inside the peds and/or deeper in the soil. Gleysols are also known as Gleyzems, meadow soils, Aqu-suborders of Entisols, Inceptisols and Mollisols (USDA soil taxonomy), or as groundwater soils and hydro-morphic soils.

The term gley, or glei, is derived from Ukrainian: глей, romanizedhlei, and was introduced into scientific terminology in 1905 by the Ukrainian scientist Georgy Vysotsky.

View the full Wikipedia page for Gley soil
↑ Return to Menu

Inceptisols in the context of Nitisol

Nitisol, in the World Reference Base for Soil Resources (WRB), is a deep, red, well-drained soil with a clay content of at least 30% and a polyhedral structure or a blocky structure, breaking into a polyhedral or a flat-edged structure. The soil aggregates show pressure faces. Nitisols correlate with the kandic alfisols, ultisols and inceptisols of the USDA soil taxonomy.

These soils are found in the tropics and subtropics; there are extensive areas of them in the tropical highlands of Ethiopia, Kenya, Democratic Republic of the Congo and Cameroon. Nitisols form from fine-textured material weathered from intermediate to basic parent rock and kaolinite, halloysite and iron oxides dominate their clay mineralogy.

View the full Wikipedia page for Nitisol
↑ Return to Menu