4 results

Organic Carbon and Physical Properties in Sandy Soil after Conversion from Degraded Pasture to Eucalyptus in the Brazilian Cerrado

Karla Nascimento Sena, Kátia Luciene Maltoni, Glaucia Amorim Faria, Ana Maria Rodrigues Cassiolato

12/Jun/2017

ABSTRACT Soil is currently seen as the most relevant carbon sink and the most effective carbon stabilizer. In contrast, agriculture is the second largest C emitter, after burning of fossil fuels. This organic carbon (OC) introduced into the soil, mainly via organic matter (OM), is essential for several soil properties and plays an extremely important role in sandy soils. The objective of this study was to describe the changes in the amounts and pools of OC and the influence thereof […]

Spatial Variability of Soil Properties in Archeological Dark Earth Sites under Cacao Cultivation

Douglas Marcelo Pinheiro da Silva, Milton César Costa Campos, Uilson Franciscon, Leandro Coutinho Alho, Luis Antônio Coutrim dos Santos, Pérsio de Paula, [...]

01/Aug/2016

ABSTRACT Soils with an A horizon formed by human activity, an anthropogenic A horizon, are found in the Amazon Region. Few studies have examined the spatial distribution of the properties of these soils. We mapped the spatial variability of some soil properties in an area of Archaeological Dark Earth (ADE) in the Brazilian Amazon. A sampling grid was defined over an area of 42 × 88 m under cacao cultivation in which sampling points were established at a spacing of […]

Physical and chemical attributes of archaeological soils developed from shell middens in the Região dos Lagos, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Guilherme Resende Corrêa, Carlos Ernesto G.R Schaefer, Vander de Freitas Melo, Kleberson Worslley de Souza, João Carlos Ker, Igor Morais Mariano Rodrigues, [...]

01/Aug/2011

In prehistoric times, innumerous shell middens, called “sambaquis”, consisting mainly of remains of marine organisms, were built along the Brazilian coast. Although the scientific community took interest in these anthropic formations, especially since the nineteenth century, their pedological context is still poorly understood. The purpose of this study was to characterize and identify the physical and chemical changes induced by soil-forming processes, as well as to compare the morphology of shell midden soils with other, already described, anthropogenic soils of […]

Phosphorous forms in cultivated indian black earth (anthrosols) of varying texture in the brazilian Amazon

Kleberson Worslley de Souza, Hedinaldo Narciso Lima, Carlos Ernesto G.R. Schaefer, Wenceslau Geraldes Teixeira, Karina Pulrolnik, Guilherme Resende Corrêa

01/Oct/2009

Despite the agricultural importance of Indian Black Earth (IBE) in the Amazon region, there are few studies that report on the relation between soil texture and chemical fertility of IBE. These soils of pre-Colombian origin, with high contents of P, Ca and other nutrients are found across the Amazon valley. IBE profiles were studied to evaluate the total contents of P, its primary chemical forms and the P transformation phases in areas with IBE soils of variable texture and in […]