
Soil Physics: Agricultural and Environmental Applications is a textbook designed for use in university courses on the subject and as a reference book for practitioners and students. The work describes the physical properties of soils and how these properties affect agriculture and the environment. It is unique in its inclusion of pedology, taxonomy, and pedotransfer functions.
The text includes:
Definitions of essential terms and concepts
Examples and problems presenting opportunities for the review and application of knowledge to real-world situations
Appendixes reviewing basics of mathematics, physics, and statistics
Descriptions of the physical properties for characterization of the solid phase of the soil
Discussion of the role of the solid phase in the retention and transport of mass and energy
Emphasis on the use of balance, steady-state, and transient-state rate equations of mass and energy transport
Principles associated with soil temperature and gas transport
Discussion on the content, energy status, and flow of soil water
Principles of solute transport in soil
Descriptions of the interactions between solutes and solid, liquid, and gaseous phases
Discussion of soil-plant water relationships
This textbook is designed for use in university courses on the subject and as a reference book for practitioners and students. The work describes the physical properties of soils and how these properties affect agriculture and the environment. It is unique in its inclusion of pedology, taxonomy and pedotransfer functions.
| marc mercuri camille paglia dale m courtney michael f stagliano athanasios papoulis | vijay govindarajan patrick johan kugelberg michael e mortenson henry f korth |