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Comparing the recent basaltic soils of parts of NSW with deeply weathered soils of Western Australia

Australian soils tend to be:

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Comparing the recent basaltic soils of parts of NSW with deeply weathered soils of Western Australia. Australian soils tend to be:. Old Salty clayey - except in the west of the continent where they tend to be sandy Acidic nutritionally and organically impoverished structurally challenging. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Australian soils tend to be:

Comparing the recent basaltic soils of parts of NSW with deeply weathered soils of

Western Australia

Page 2: Australian soils tend to be:

Australian soils tend to be:

• Old• Salty• clayey - except in the west of the continent

where they tend to be sandy• Acidic• nutritionally and organically impoverished• structurally challenging

Page 3: Australian soils tend to be:

Basaltic soils of East Coast• Pockets of recently formed

basaltic soils exist in parts the East Coast of Australia.

• Recent volcanic activity -oldest extinct volcano found in Northern Queensland 33 mil yrs oldn Youngest in Victoria 10 mil yrs old (Australia moved over hotspot)

• Eg Mt Warning Tweed Coast is a remnant of a volcano that spewed lava around 20 million years ago.

Page 4: Australian soils tend to be:
Page 5: Australian soils tend to be:

Australian plate is moving North at around 7cm per yr

Page 6: Australian soils tend to be:

Basaltic Soil

• Parent rock basalt (mafic)

• Fine textured• Deep red/ chocolate

colour• High in nutrients (high

level of calcium phosphate which acts like fertilizer)

• Very fertile

Page 7: Australian soils tend to be:

Deeply weathered laterite soils of Western Australia

• Parent rock generally granite (felsic)

• Laterite (soil residue composed of secondary iron oxides)

• Coarse texture• Old (long time of weathering,

leaching)• Nutrient poor• Colour red (due to oxidation of

iron)• Rich in Aluminium and Iron

Page 8: Australian soils tend to be:
Page 9: Australian soils tend to be:

• Australian soils have been subject to extensive degradation due to such practices as; overgrazing, over cultivation, tree clearing, and irrigation.

• A continuous cover of vegetation on the soil results in the most stable situation. However this is not possible for many land uses, particularly those in the agricultural sector.

• Major forms of degradation:wind and water erosionreduced fertility because of nutrient loss physical

breakdown of soil structure soil acidificationsalinisation

Page 10: Australian soils tend to be:

Soil ErosionIs the movement of particles Of soil, surface sediments and rocks by the action of water, glaciers, winds, waves and so on

Page 11: Australian soils tend to be:

Wind erosion

Page 12: Australian soils tend to be:

Sheet erosion• Removal of uniform layer of soil over a wide area.

Usually caused by rainfall (rain drop splash)• Removes the top soil layer (bulk of nutrients)

Page 13: Australian soils tend to be:

Rill Erosion• Numerous small channels

Page 14: Australian soils tend to be:

Gully ErosionRemoval of soil by a concentrated flow Of water with a sufficient velocity to cutLarge channels