See more from this Session: Soil Genesis and Classification: I (Includes Graduate Student Competition)
The current study focuses on 5,500 ha in Leon County, Texas, mapped as Rader-Derly complex and Derly-Rader complex. Rader (Aquic Paleustalfs) is on mounds and Derly (Typic Glossaqualfs) in the low intermounds. These soils are mapped primarily on terraces of the Trinity River system within the survey area. Using elevation levels published for the various fluviatile terrace deposits of the Trinity River, six groups (five terrace level groups and an upland group) were identified for analysis of mounds within the study area. Processes and factors of soil formation during the life of these features are considered using two methods – remotely sensed elevation data and sampling data collected in the field. Size, shape, and relief of mounds were analyzed using airborne-based remotely sensed LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) elevation data. Particle size distributions and pedon descriptions of mounds formed on materials of various ages are compared across the study area with special emphasis given to possible spatial trends. Observations indicate a fluvial origin with pimple mound orientation corresponding to surrounding ridge and swale features of the ancient Trinity River.
See more from this Session: Soil Genesis and Classification: I (Includes Graduate Student Competition)