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  5. Deformational Mass Transport and Invasive Processes in Soil Evolution

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Article
en
1992

Deformational Mass Transport and Invasive Processes in Soil Evolution

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0 Files

en
1992
Vol 255 (5045)
Vol. 255
DOI: 10.1126/science.255.5045.695

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Mary E Power
Mary E Power

University of California, Berkeley

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George H. Brimhall
Oliver A. Chadwick
Chris Lewis
+7 more

Abstract

Soils are differentiated vertically by coupled chemical, mechanical, and biological transport processes. Soil properties vary with depth, depending on the subsurface stresses, the extent of mixing, and the balance between mass removal in solution or suspension and mass accumulation near the surface. Channels left by decayed roots and burrowing animals allow organic and inorganic detritus and precipitates to move through the soil from above. Accumulation occurs at depths where small pores restrict further passage. Consecutive phases of translocation and root growth stir the soil; these processes constitute an invasive dilatational process that leads to positive cumulative strains. In contrast, below the depth of root penetration and mass additions, mineral dissolution by descending organic acids leads to internal collapse under overburden load. This softened and condensed precursor horizon is transformed into soil by biological activity, which stirs and expands the evolving residuum by invasion by roots and macropore networks that allows mixing of materials from above.

How to cite this publication

George H. Brimhall, Oliver A. Chadwick, Chris Lewis, W. Compston, Ian S. Williams, Kathy J. Danti, W. E. Dietrich, Mary E Power, David M. Hendricks, James Bratt (1992). Deformational Mass Transport and Invasive Processes in Soil Evolution. , 255(5045), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.255.5045.695.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

1992

Authors

10

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

en

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1126/science.255.5045.695

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