The size and horizon of origin of fragments produced by deep ripping texture contrast soils
- 1 January 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by CSIRO Publishing in Soil Research
- Vol. 25 (2) , 211-222
- https://doi.org/10.1071/sr9870211
Abstract
Two texture contrast soils were cultivated by deep ripping when they were drier than their lower plastic limits. The size distribution and soil horizon-of-origin of the resulting fragments were measured. One soil, a transitional red-brown earth, had either been previously uncultivated below the A horizon or had been deep ploughed and gypsum added two years previously. There was much fragmentation and mixing of soil from both of the horizons. Fine soil (50 mm) was brought to near the surface. The fragment size distributions were characteristically bimodal. Fragments of the fine mode (<2 mm) came mainly from the A horizon, fragments of the coarse mode (11-25 mm or larger) came mainly from the B horizon. In the laboratory, clods from the deep ripped soil were crushed at the same low water potential (air dry). The crushing energy per unit mass (specific crushing energy) was inversely proportional to the normalized geometric mean diameter of the fragments produced. Suggestions are made for modelling the effects of deep ripping.Keywords
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