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pedologia

Pedology is a branch of soil science that studies soils as natural bodies in their environment. It covers the origin and development of soils (pedogenesis), their morphology and physical properties, classification, and spatial distribution across the landscape. Pedology emphasizes soils in relation to the climate, biota, parent material, topography, and time, collectively known as the soil-forming factors.

Key concepts include soil profile and horizons, constituent mineral and organic material, structure, texture, color, chemistry,

Historically, pedology is associated with the work of Vasily Dokuchaev, who in the late 19th century promoted

and
physics.
Pedology
uses
classification
systems
to
group
soils
by
genesis
and
properties,
such
as
established
soil
taxonomies
and
reference
base
frameworks.
The
field
often
distinguishes
pedology
from
edaphology,
which
studies
soils
primarily
as
they
affect
living
organisms
and
agricultural
productivity.
soils
as
a
distinct
natural
body
and
laid
the
groundwork
for
modern
soil
science.
Today
pedology
informs
land-use
planning,
environmental
management,
ecosystem
studies,
geotechnical
assessments,
archaeology,
and
planetary
science
where
soil
analogs
are
examined
on
other
planets
and
moons.
While
often
used
interchangeably
with
soil
science,
pedology
remains
the
core
focus
on
soil
formation,
properties,
and
spatial
distribution.