SCANNING ELECTRON MICROSCOPE OBSERVATIONS ON SOIL CRUSTS AND THEIR FORMATION

Abstract
Scanning electron micrographs (SEM) of crusts of loessial soils are presented. SEM observations were performed on crusts formed by raindrop impact at various stages of their formation. The crust structure was compared to the natural undisturbed soil. During the crust formation, a middle-term stage developed at which coarse particles, stripped of the fine ones, composed the surface layer of the soil. At the final stage of the crust formation, the coarse particles were washed away, and a thin seal skin, about 0.1 mm thick, formed the uppermost layer of the soil. A depositional crust, which was formed mainly by the translocation of fine particles, was marked by the presence of a thin skin also about 0.1 mm thick, suggesting involvement of similar secondary mechanisms of formation. This work illustrates the use of SEM for the study of soil crust formation and structure.

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