Soil formation is a slow, continuous process involving weathering of rocks, biological activity, and climatic influence. It lays the foundation for agriculture, ecology, and environmental science.
How Long Does Soil Formation Take?
- Formation of 1 inch of soil takes approximately 800–1000 years.
- Influenced by parent material, climate, organisms, topography, and time.
Scientific Definitions
🔹 Dokuchaev (Russian Pedologist) “Soil is the result of the combined activity and reciprocal influence of parent material, organisms, climate, topography, and age of land.”
🔹 Hans Jenny (1941); “Soil (S) = f(cl, o, r, p, t…)”
Where:
- cl = climate
- o = organisms
- r = relief (topography)
- p = parent material
- t = time
Factors of Soil Formation
Soil formation factors are categorized as:
(A) Passive Factors:
- Parent Material
- Topography/Relief
(B) Active Factors:
- Climate
- Organisms (Biosphere)
(C) Neutral Factor:
- Time / Age of Land
🔸 1. Parent Material; The unconsolidated rock or organic material from which soil develops.
Types:
- Residual: Remains in place (e.g., granite, basalt)
- Transported: Moved by water, wind, ice, or gravity
- Biological: Composed of organic matter (e.g., peat)
Influences soil texture, structure, mineral composition, and fertility.
- Topography / Relief; Affects:
- Drainage and runoff
- Soil erosion
- Sun and wind exposure
Slope Impact:
- Upper slope: Less clay, OM, lighter color, well-drained
- Valley: Deep, clayey, poorly drained
- Climate; Includes:
- Rainfall
- Temperature
- Humidity
- Wind
🔹 Rainfall affects leaching, OM content, clay mineral formation
🔹 High rainfall → Leaching of salts → Acidic soils
🔹 Low rainfall → Salt accumulation at surface
🔹 Temperature speeds up chemical weathering
🔸 4. Organisms (Biosphere)
- Flora: Roots break rocks, add OM, and form the O horizon
- Fauna: Earthworms, ants mix and aerate the soil
- Microbes: Decompose OM → humus
- Time / Age of Land
- Refers to how long soil-forming processes have been active
- Young soils: Less developed horizons
- Old soils: Well-developed profiles with distinct layers
- Time allows for horizonation and maturity
Soil Forming Processes (Simonson, 1959)
Process | Description |
Addition | Input of OM, minerals, water from external sources |
Losses | Removal by leaching, erosion, volatilization |
Translocation | Movement of clay, OM, Fe, Al within soil profile |
Transformation | Chemical/biological changes to soil components |
Horizonation | Formation of distinct soil horizons (O, A, B, C, R) |
Fundamental Pedogenic Processes
- Humification: Decomposition of organic matter into humus
- Eluviation (Bluviation): Washing out of clay, Fe, Al, OM from upper layers
- Illuviation (Mhuviation): Deposition/accumulation of eluviated materials in lower horizons
- Horizonation: Development of distinguishable soil layers
Specific Zonal Pedogenic Processes
🔸 1. Calcification
- Accumulation of CaCO₃ in soil (as Kankar nodules)
- Occurs in arid/semi-arid regions
CO₂ + H₂O → H₂CO₃ (Carbonic Acid)
H₂CO₃ + Ca → Ca(HCO₃)₂ → CaCO₃ ↓ + CO₂ ↑
🔸 2. Gypsification; Deposition of gypsum (CaSO₄·2H₂O) in arid zones
🔸 3. Decalcification; Leaching/removal of CaCO₃, Occurs in humid regions, Opposite of calcification
🔸 4. Podzolization; Removal of bases, Fe, Al, OM → acidic soil, Forms bleached A-horizon (ash-colored), Common in cold, moist forest zones
Typical Podzol Profile:
- Precipitated humus
- Reddish brown Fe/Al layer
- Yellowish horizon → parent material
🔸 5. Laterization
- Leaching of silica, accumulation of Fe/Al oxides (sesquioxides)
- Soil becomes brick-hard when dry → Laterite
- Found in humid tropics
Laterites are:
- Rich in Fe/Al oxides
- Poor in silica and bases
- Used for coconut, banana, coffee plantations
Conditions Favoring Laterization
- High rainfall (2000–2500 mm)
- Constant high temperature
- Good drainage
- Tropical vegetation
Summary Table – Zonal Soil Forming Processes
Process | Main Features | Region |
Calcification | CaCO₃ accumulation | Arid/Semi-arid |
Decalcification | CaCO₃ removal | Humid |
Podzolization | Leaching of bases, Fe, Al | Cold, moist |
Laterization | Silica leached; Fe/Al left | Humid tropics |
Key Exam Points
- Kankar = Result of calcification
- Podzol = Acidic, ash-like layer
- Laterite = Brick-hard, Fe-rich soil
- Jenny’s equation: S = f(cl, o, r, p, t)
- Simonson (1959): 4 basic soil processes
- Humification = humus formation
- Eluviation vs Illuviation = Outwashing vs Inwashing
- Gleization
- Origin: From Russian word “Gley” meaning blue-grey clay
- Occurs: In waterlogged and poorly drained conditions
- Soil type: Hydromorphic soils
- Key Features:
- Formation of gley horizon (grey-blue color)
- Anaerobic conditions cause Fe and Mn reduction
- Appearance of mottles and concretions
- Occurs in wetlands, swamps, or low-lying rice fields
Gleying is due to poor aeration, not climate.
- Salination
- Definition: Accumulation of soluble salts (Na⁺, Cl⁻, SO₄²⁻, etc.) in the root zone
- Common in: Arid and semi-arid regions
Causes of Salinization:
- Shallow/brackish groundwater
- Low-lying topography
- Poor natural drainage
- Drying of lake beds (leaves salts on surface)
- Alluvial deposits near coastal areas
- Use of saline irrigation water
Results in white crust on soil surface; harmful for most crops.
- Solonization (Alkalization)
- Definition: Accumulation of exchangeable sodium (Na⁺) in soil colloids
- pH: Often > 8.5
- Soil type: Sodic or black alkali soil
Features:
- Dispersion of soil particles → poor structure
- Formation of black organo-clay coatings
- Hard crusts, poor infiltration
- Toxic to plant roots
Black alkali soils are rich in sodium and organic matter stains.
- Solodization (Dealkalization)
- Definition: Removal of exchangeable sodium from soil
- Improves soil structure and fertility
Example Reaction: 2NaX + CaSO₄ → Na₂SO₄ (leached) + CaX
Where:
- X = soil exchange complex
- CaX = calcium-rich exchange complex (improves structure)
This is a reclamation process for sodic soils.
- Pedoturbation (Soil Mixing)
Pedoturbation = natural or biological mixing of soil layers, affecting horizon development and profile uniformity.
Types of Pedoturbation:
Type | Agent | Example |
Faunal | Animals (e.g., earthworms, rodents, termites) | Mixing of surface and subsurface layers |
Floral | Plant roots | Cracking and organic mixing |
Argillipedoturbation | Shrink-swell clays (Vertisols) | Black cotton soils of central India |
Vertisols show deep cracking and self-mulching due to argillipedoturbation.
Summary Table – Intrazonal Processes
Process | Key Features | Soil Type / Zone |
Gleization | Waterlogging, Fe & Mn reduction | Hydromorphic soils |
Salination | Accumulation of salts | Arid/semi-arid; low areas |
Solonization | Na⁺ accumulation, pH > 8.5 | Sodic (alkali) soils |
Solodization | Removal of Na⁺ from exchange sites | Reclaimed sodic soils |
Pedoturbation | Mixing of horizons by natural agents | Common in Vertisols |
Competitive Exam Quick Pointers
- Gleization → Anaerobic condition → grey/blue layer
- Salination → White salt crusts → affects plant growth
- Solonization → High Na⁺ → dispersion → poor soil structure
- Solodization → Na⁺ removed → Ca improves soil
- Vertisols → Show argillipedoturbation