Anthrosol

An anthrosol (or anthropogenic soil) in the World Reference Base for Soil Resources (WRB) is a type of soil that has been formed or heavily modified due to long-term human activity, such as from irrigation, addition of organic waste or wet-field cultivation used to create paddy fields.[1]

Such soils can be formed from any parent soil, and are commonly found in areas where agriculture has been practised for centuries. Anthrosols can be found worldwide, though they tend to have different soil horizons in different regions. For example, in northwestern Europe anthrosols commonly have plaggic or terric (strongly affected by manure) horizons, and together they cover some 500,000 hectares.

In archaeology

The presence of anthrosols can be used to detect long-term human habitation, and has been used by archaeologists to identify sites of interest. Anthrosols that can indicate such activity can be described as, for instance, plaggic (from the long-term use of manure to enrich soil), irragic (from the use of flood or surface irrigation), hortic (from deep cultivation, manure use and presence of other anthropogenic organic matter such as kitchen waste), anthraquic (from anthros – man and aqua – water – meaning produced by man-made soil moisture management including irrigation or terracing), etc. Anthrosols can be detected by visual inspection of soils, or even from satellite imagery.[2]

gollark: SolarFlame5
gollark: Natural selection is overrated.
gollark: They did really good work on some things (biochemistry) and did weird things otherwise (appendixes, our eyes being the wrong way round, oddly routed nerves).
gollark: We were not "designed". We're the output of blind optimization processes.
gollark: > also we kiiiiiiiinda should die of easily preventable diseasesÅAAAAAAAAAÅAAAAAAAAAAAAÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆ

See also

References

  • IUSS Working Group WRB: World Reference Base for Soil Resources 2014, Update 2015. World Soil Resources Reports 106, FAO, Rome 2015. ISBN 978-92-5-108369-7. (PDF 2,3 MB).

Further reading

  • Howard, J. (2017) Anthropogenic Soils; Springer International Publishing, ISBN 978-3-319-54330-7


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