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  1. A significant number of the terms included in this glossary are words that can be found in a common dictionary, but that have specific unique meanings in the context of soil survey and soil classification. Examples include artifacts, buried soil, artificial drainage, component, correlation, horizon, and normal year.

  2. Apr 13, 2022 · Modern versus Buried Soil Profiles. A buried soil profile, or paleosol (above geologist ‘s head), represents soil development during the last interglacial period. A modern soil profile (Alfisol) occurs near the land surface.

  3. A buried soil profile, or paleosol (above geologist’s head), represents soil development during the last interglacial period. A modern soil profile (Alfisol) occurs near the land surface. Source: D. Grimley.

  4. A buried soil profile, or paleosol (above geologist ‘s head), represents soil development during the last interglacial period. A modern soil profile (Alfisol) occurs near the land surface. Source: D. Grimley.

  5. May 8, 2018 · Environmental Encyclopedia. *buried soil* Soil covered by an alluvial [1], colluvial (see COLLUVIUM [2]), aeolian, glacial, or organic deposit, and being a product of a former period of pedogenesis.

  6. A buried soil is defined by the National Resources Conservation Service as a soil that is “covered with a surface mantle of new soil material that either is 50 cm or more thick or is 30–50 cm thick and has a thickness that equals at least half the total thickness of the named diagnostic horizons that are preserved in the buried soil ...

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  8. A buried soil profile, or paleosol (above geologist ‘s head), represents soil development during the last interglacial period. A modern soil profile (Alfisol) occurs near the land surface. Source: D. Grimley.

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