Soil Formation
By 2000, CSIRO scientists had documented that it takes about 1,000 years for nature to form just 2–3 cm of topsoil, yet a single heavy rainstorm on bare land can strip that layer away in minutes. In this lesson you'll discover how rock, time, and dead matter combine to make soil, and why Australia's ancient soils are both precious and dangerously fragile.
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Q1 · Where does soil come from? Is it just crushed rock, or something more?
Q2 · Australia's soil is ancient and often nutrient-poor. Why might old soil be less fertile than recently formed soil?
● Know
- The three ingredients of soil: weathered rock, organic matter, living organisms
- The five soil horizons: O, A, B, C and R
- Key Australian soil types: red earth, black soil (vertosol), laterite
● Understand
- Why very old, heavily leached soils are often nutrient-poor
- Why dryland salinity is caused by clearing native vegetation
- How Indigenous land management maintained healthy soils for 65,000 years
● Can do
- Draw and label a soil profile showing all five horizons
- Describe two threats to Australian soil and one management solution each
- Explain leaching using the concept of water washing nutrients downward
- Parent material
- Humus
- Leaching
- Pedogenesis
- Nutrients washed downward through soil by water
- Decomposed organic matter that improves soil fertility
- The scientific name for soil formation
- The rock or sediment that soil develops from
Soil forms when mixes with decomposed by microbes. This produces a dark, fertile material called . Over time, rainfall nutrients downward, making old soils less fertile.
It takes about 1,000 years to form 2–3 cm of topsoil. That thin layer between rock and air is what every plant, every animal, every human civilisation has ever depended on. And we can lose it in a single heavy rainstorm if the land is bare.
Soil formation (pedogenesis) starts with parent material, the underlying rock or sediment, being weathered into small mineral particles. Three ingredients combine:
- Weathered rock: provides minerals (calcium, potassium, iron) and gives soil its texture, sandy, silty or clay.
- Organic matter: dead plant and animal material decomposed by bacteria, fungi, worms and insects into humus, dark, nutrient-rich material that retains water.
- Living organisms: billions of bacteria and fungi, earthworms, ants, beetles, they decompose, mix and aerate the soil.
Time: the more developed the soil, the longer it has been forming, but very old soils can be leached (nutrients washed out by rainfall over millennia), leaving them nutrient-poor despite being ancient. Australia's soils are some of the world's oldest and most weathered, which is why they are often infertile compared to younger volcanic or glaciated soils overseas.
- 3 ingredients: weathered rock (minerals/texture) + organic matter (nutrients) + living organisms (decompose/mix).
- Australia's soils = ancient and highly leached → often nutrient-poor.
- Takes ~1,000 years to form 2–3 cm of topsoil.
Soil forms from that has been into small particles. The most fertile layer is called the , which is rich in from decomposed organisms.
A soil profile shows layers (horizons) from the surface down to bedrock. Think of it like cutting a slice through a layer cake, each layer is different.
| Horizon | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| O | Organic layer | Leaf litter and dead material not yet decomposed. Often absent in dry Australian conditions. |
| A | Topsoil | Darkest layer, richest in humus. Most plant roots, earthworms, and soil life live here. The most valuable horizon. |
| B | Subsoil | Less organic matter; accumulates clay and minerals leached down from the A horizon. |
| C | Weathered parent material | Partially broken-down rock fragments, clearly identifiable rock pieces in a matrix of finer material. |
| R | Bedrock | Solid unweathered rock. The original parent material. Cannot be dug with a spade. |
Australian soil types:
- Red earth, iron-rich, highly weathered, most common in dryland Australia (Outback). Very old and nutrient-poor.
- Black soil (vertosol), cracking clay, very fertile when moist; common in the Darling Downs (QLD) and other wheat belt regions. Valuable for agriculture.
- Laterite, iron and aluminium oxides; forms a hard iron layer (ironstone pan); covers much of WA and NT; nutrient-poor and difficult to farm.
- O horizon
- A horizon
- B horizon
- C horizon
- R horizon
- Darkest layer, rich in humus and plant roots
- Solid unweathered bedrock
- Leaf litter and dead material on the surface
- Subsoil, clay-rich, less organic matter
- Partially broken-down rock fragments
Threats to Australian soil:
- Wind and water erosion: Loss of topsoil, Australia has one of the world's worst soil erosion problems. Without plant cover, rain dislodges soil particles and runoff carries them away.
- Dryland salinity: Native deep-rooted plants kept the water table low. When cleared for shallow-rooted crops: groundwater rises → salt stored deep in the soil is drawn to the surface → "white death", salt crystals form, killing crops. About 2.5 million hectares of southern Australia are affected.
- Acidification: Farming chemicals and some crops lower soil pH over time, reducing fertility.
Solutions: minimum tillage (disturb soil less), cover crops (plant matter protects bare soil), windbreaks (trees block wind erosion), contour farming (ploughing along slopes to reduce runoff), revegetation.
Indigenous land management: Aboriginal Australians managed soil and vegetation for approximately 65,000 years. Firestick farming (controlled burns) recycled nutrients into soil, reduced fuel loads, and promoted new plant growth. Water management and seed propagation maintained healthy, productive landscapes. European farming practices dramatically altered soil structure and fertility in just 250 years.
- Dryland salinity
- Topsoil erosion
- Soil acidification
- Bare ground exposed to rain and wind
- Clearing deep-rooted native trees raises the water table
- Farming chemicals lowering soil pH over time
European settlers cleared most of southern Australia's native vegetation for farming within 150 years. Before answering: predict two ways this clearing would affect the soil over time, and explain why.
How close was your prediction?
Well done, you identified the link between land clearing and soil degradation.
Key insight: native vegetation does two jobs, holds soil (stops erosion) and pumps groundwater (stops salinity).
At the start of the lesson, you learned about 'white death', over 2.5 million hectares of southern Australia covered in salt crystals that kill all crops, caused by clearing native trees.
Now that you understand soil formation, explain why removing trees caused the salt problem. Use the words water table and salinity in your answer.
Q1. Draw and label a soil profile showing the O, A, B, C and R horizons. Briefly describe each layer. (5 marks)
Q2. Explain why Australia's ancient soils are often nutrient-poor, using the concept of leaching. (3 marks)
Q3. Describe two threats to Australian soil quality and one way each can be managed. (4 marks)
Answers
▾MCQ 1
C The A horizon is the topsoil layer, the darkest, richest in humus, and where most plant roots and soil organisms live. The B horizon is the clay-rich subsoil.
MCQ 2
B Humus is the product of decomposed plant and animal matter. It makes soil dark, spongy, and nutrient-rich. It is not a mineral, clay, or water.
MCQ 3
C Native vegetation had deep roots that absorbed groundwater and kept the water table low. After clearing, only shallow-rooted crops were planted, so the water table rose, bringing dissolved salt to the soil surface.
MCQ 4
B Iron oxide (haematite) is the same compound as rust. When iron-rich rocks in the Outback undergo chemical weathering (oxidation), haematite forms and tints the soil and rock red.
MCQ 5
B Black soil (vertosol) is very fertile because it is rich in clay minerals that hold water and nutrients well. It is the base of the Darling Downs wheat belt in Queensland.
Short Answer 1
Model answer: O = surface layer of leaf litter and undecomposed dead material (thin or absent in dry Australia). A = dark topsoil layer rich in humus; most plant roots and soil organisms live here; most fertile layer. B = subsoil; less organic matter; accumulates clay leached from above; lighter colour. C = partially broken-down rock fragments; you can still identify the parent rock type. R = solid bedrock; unweathered; cannot be dug with a spade.
Short Answer 2
Model answer: Australia's soils are among the world's oldest, some have been weathering for hundreds of millions of years. Over this time, rainfall moves through the soil, dissolving and carrying nutrients (especially phosphorus, nitrogen, potassium) downward in a process called leaching. Eventually the nutrients are carried so far down that plant roots can't access them, or they enter the groundwater. Unlike volcanic or glaciated soils in other countries (which are young and freshly mineralised), Australian soils have had no geological "reset", no fresh rock to re-fertilise them.
Short Answer 3
Model answer: Threat 1: Dryland salinity, caused by clearing native deep-rooted vegetation, which raises the water table and brings salt to the surface. Management: replanting deep-rooted native trees and perennial pastures to lower the water table. Threat 2: Wind and water erosion, bare soil exposed after clearing or harvesting is easily dislodged by rain or blown away by wind. Management: cover crops (planting a ground-covering crop in the off-season) or windbreaks (rows of trees along paddock edges) to protect soil.