Rendzina

Rendzina soil (Castelltallat)
Rendzina soil on the Maastrichtian Chalk in Kozubów Landscape Park, Poland

Rendzina is a dark, grayish-brown, humus-rich, intrazonal soil. It is one of the soils most closely associated with the bedrock type and an example of initial stages of soil development. It is usually formed by weathering of soft rock types: usually carbonate rocks (dolomite, limestone, marl, chalk) but occasionally sulfate rocks (gypsum).

This is one of the most interesting of the soil names; it originates from an old Polish word "rzędzić", which means "to chatter". The soil of this type contains a significant amount of gravel and stones, which, during plowing, produce various sound effects (clicking, screeching, etc.), i.e., "talk" to the ploughman.

The term is used for a class of shallow soils over chalk, limestone, or extremely calcareous unconsolidated material in which the topsoil is calcareous,[1] i.e., it contains free calcium carbonate, which gives a fizz if dilute acid is dripped onto a soil sample. This makes for a very distinctive soil. The rendzinas in Wales, UK, for example constitute a simple A-C profile, a dark calcareous topsoil immediately over shattered limestone. Because the soils are shallow and stony, there is much semi-natural vegetation to be found in these areas. The plant communities are distinctive, with much scrub and calcareous grassland, often with unusual or even rare species.

The term 'rendzina' appears in various soil classification systems, both current and obsolete.

References

  1. "Soil classification system of England and Wales". Cranfield University, UK, National Soil Resources Institute. Retrieved 2011-12-22.

See also

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