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Australian Soil Classification

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Australia's soil classification system

TheAustralian Soil Classification[1] is the classification system currently used to describe andclassify soils inAustralia.[2][3] It is a general-purpose,hierarchical classification system, and consists of five categorical levels from the most general to the most specific:Order,Suborder,Great Group,Subgroup, andFamily.[4] An online key is available.[5] The Australian Soil Classification supersedes other classification systems previously developed for Australian soils, including the Factual Key[6][7] (1960) and theHandbook of Australian Soils[8] (1968).

The Australian Soil Classification was developed by Ray Isbell, a retired soil scientist with CSIRO, and first published in 1996. A revised first edition was published in 2002, a second edition in 2010 and a third edition in March 2021. Since Ray Isbell's death in 2001 the National Committee on Soil and Terrain has led the updates and improvements to the classification and this committee is now listed as a co-author with Ray Isbell.

Structure of the classification system

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Order level

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At the top, most general, level of the Australian Soil Classification, there are fifteen Soil Orders. They are:Anthroposols,Arenosols,Calcarosols,Chromosols,Dermosols,Ferrosols,Hydrosols,Kandosols,Kurosols,Organosols,Podosols,Rudosols,Sodosols,Tenosols andVertosols. The character of many of the Soil Orders reflects the arid, strongly-weathered nature of the Australian continent.[9]

Suborder level

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For the Vertosol, Kurosol, Sodosol, Chromosol, Ferrosol, Dermosol and Kandosol orders, the suborder-level categories reflect the dominant colour of the upper part of the B2 horizon. There are five suborder colour categories, namely Red, Brown, Yellow, Grey and Black. The colour classes have the same names as, but are not directly equivalent to, those used in the Factual Key[6][10] and estimated using a subset of theMunsell Colour System. The full suborder designation then becomesRed Kurosol,Grey Vertosol, for example.

The remaining soil orders have suborder categories that reflect unique characteristics of the given order. For example, the Hydrosol order is split intoIntertidal Hydrosols,Supratidal Hydrosols,Extratidal Hydrosols,Hypersalic Hydrosols,Salic Hydrosols,Redoxic Hydrosols andOxyaquic Hydrosols.[11] On the other hand, the Rudosols are split intoHypergypsic Rudosols,Hypersalic Rudosols,Shelly Rudosols,Carbic Rudosols,Arenic Rudosols,Lutic Rudosols,Stratic Rudosols,Clastic Rudosols andLeptic Rudosols at the suborder level.[12]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Australian Soil Classification (as Online Key)". CSIRO. March 2021. Retrieved11 February 2016.
  2. ^Isbell, Raymond F. (1996).The Australian Soil Classification (1st ed.). Collingwood, Victoria: CSIRO Publishing.ISBN 0-643-05813-3.
  3. ^Isbell, Raymond F. (2002).The Australian Soil Classification (Revised ed.). Collingwood, Victoria: CSIRO Publishing.ISBN 0-643-06898-8.
  4. ^CSIRO."How to Classify".The Australian Soil Classification. Retrieved13 July 2010.
  5. ^The National Committee on Soil and Terrain (2 June 2021)."The Australian Soil Classification".Soil Science Australia.Archived from the original on 2021-05-10. Retrieved2 June 2021.
  6. ^abNorthcote, Keith H. (1960).A factual key for the recognition of Australian soils. Divisional Report No. 4/60. CSIRO Division of Soils.
  7. ^Northcote, Keith H. (1971).A factual key for the recognition of Australian soils (3rd ed.). Glenside, South Australia: Rellim Technical Publications.
  8. ^Stace, H.C.T.; Hubble, G.D.; Brewer, R; Northcote, K.H.; Sleeman, J.R.; Mulcahy, M.J.; Hallsworth, E.G. (1968).A Handbook of Australian Soils. Glenside, South Australia: Rellim Technical Publications.
  9. ^Fitzpatrick, R.W.; Powell, B.; McKenzie, N.J.; Maschmedt, D.J.; Schoknecht, N. (2003). "Demands on soil classification in Australia". In Eswaran, H.; Rice, T.; Ahrens, R.; Stewart, B.A. (eds.).Soil Classification: A Global Desk Reference. Boca Raton, Florida: CRC Press.ISBN 0-8493-1339-2.
  10. ^CSIRO."Colour Classes".The Australian Soil Classification. Retrieved14 July 2010.
  11. ^CSIRO."Hydrosols".The Australian Soil Classification. Retrieved14 July 2010.
  12. ^CSIRO."Rudosols".The Australian Soil Classification. Archived fromthe original on 21 September 2010. Retrieved14 July 2010.
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