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Greyzem

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Soil classification used in the FAO soil classification system
Greyzem
Used inFAO soil classification
Parent materialdecalcified unconsolidated materials including eolian, fluvial and lacustrine deposits, solifluction material and glacial till.

Greyzem (from Anglo-Saxon, grey, and Russian, zemlja, earth) is a soil classification used in the FAO soil classification system which was introduced with the UNESCO Soil Map of the World in 1978. The name is connotative of uncoated silt and quartz grains which are present in layers rich in organic matter. It was one of the original 26 Great Groups and remained as one of the 28 groups in the 1988 revised version.

Along with chernozems, kastanozems, and phaeozems, these four soil groups form a set of soil groups that are mainly found in steppe (aka pampa in South America or prairie in Northern America) regions. These soils are all characterized by a mollic horizon and vegetation of dry forests and ephemeral grasses where accumulation of organic matter dominates over leaching processes.

The greyzem classification contains two Soil Units:

  • Gleyic greyzems – Greyzems showing gleyic properties within 100 cm of the surface
  • Haplic greyzems – Greyzems lacking gleyic properties within 100 cm of the surface

The term gleyic comes from the Russian local word gley meaning "mucky soil mass" while haplic comes from the Greek haplous (simple) which is meant to connote soils with a simple, normal horizons sequence.

Taxonomically, Greyzem would most closely correlate to Dark Grey Chernozem under the Canadian System of Soil Classification and Albolls and Boralfic Boroll subgroups under USDA soil taxonomy.

References

  1. "FAO - Soil Unit Classification Scheme: GREYZEMS". Archived from the original on 2007-08-19.
  2. ^ FAO - Unesco Soil map of the world : revised legend with corrections and updates (PDF) (Technical report). 1997. ISBN 9789066720572.
  3. Daniel Hillel (2005). Encyclopedia of Soils in the Environment. Volume 1. A-Fa. ISBN 9780123485304. OCLC 704052321.
  4. "The Canadian System of Soil Classification, 3rd edition — Chapter 16: Correlation of Canadian Soil Taxonomy with Other Systems". Retrieved 2022-07-16.
Soil classification
World Reference Base
for Soil Resources
(1998–)
USDA soil taxonomy
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Non-systematic soil types
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