10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «SOLONISATION»
Discover the use of
solonisation in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
solonisation and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Early European Agriculture: Its Foundations and Development ...
The medium to moderately heavy silts were only settled during later periods, as
were the fragile soils liable to solonisation. Evidence from modern farmers
suggests that the Early Neolithic people were aware of even slight differences in
soil ...
British Academy. Major Research Project in the Early History of Agriculture, Eric S. Higgs, M. R. Jarman, 1982
2
The Living Soil: The Processes of Soil Formation
The general term for these processes which redistribute the salts through the
profile to form a solonetz is solonisation; the result of solonisation is an alkaline (
sodic, or non-saline alkali) soil. Solonetz may develop by solonisation of fresh ...
3
Soil Survey of the Many Peaks District, Albany Road Board, ...
This, or some earlier, similar period, could have been accompanied by a heavier
accession of salt and the development of solonisation in soils far more generally
than at present in the southern part of Western Australia. The evidence ...
Among the many physical problems met with in agricultural development and
farm management in the state of Western Australia, those associated with "
solonisation" of soils are of major importance. The term "solonisation" is here
used in its ...
5
Elsevier's Dictionary of Soil Science: Definitions in ...
A dense subsurface horizon (a natric B horizon) with a higher clay content than
the overlying horizons results. f solonetzisation; solonisation d Solonetzierung e
solonetzización 7781 Solonetz with Great-depth Columns (S.Clas.) In Russian ...
A. Canarache, I.I. Vintila, I. Munteanu, 2006
6
Optimisation of Nutrient Cycling and Soil Quality for ...
If the accumulated salts are high in sodium, the proportion of sodium ions
occupying the cation exchange complex of minerals and organic colloids
increase (solonisation). Once exchangeable sodium reaches about 15%, the clay
sized ...
S. C. Jarvis, P. J. Murray, J. A. Roker, 2005
(ii) Rubefication, the /'/; situ weathering of iron oxides and their transformation into
deep red, poorly-hydrated ferric oxides (ct-Fe203, haematite) under climates with
marked seasonal contrasts. (iii) Solonisation (or alkalinisation), the leaching ...
P. Lavelle, A. Spain, 2001
This process of replacement of calcium by sodium is known as solonisation, and
it is thought that, in this instance, it is due to age-long treatment with rain water
which, in this district, carries down from 20 to 30 lbs. of sea salt per acre per
annum ...
Western Australia. Dept. of Agriculture, 1940
9
Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia, ...
They typically have heavier subsoils, considered due to solonisation, are
markedly alkaline with a pH varying from 7-5-9*5 and are characterised by large
quantities of calcium carbonate. This latter is normally in the form of rubble or
sheet ...
10
Journal of the Department of Agriculture of Western Australia
This process of replacement of calcium by sodium is known as solonisation, and
it is thought that, in this instance, it is due to age-long treatment with rain water
which, in this district, carries down from 20 to 30 lbs. of sea salt per acre per
annum ...