Geography, asked by annny2730, 11 months ago

18. State the features of red, yellow and black soil.

Answers

Answered by cordelin
3
Yellow Soil. a soil formed under broad-leaved forests in humid subtropical regions, chiefly on parent material fromclayey shales. It has an acid reaction and low humus content, and its yellow color is caused by the presence of ferric hydroxide.

Red soil is a type of soil that develops in a warm, temperate, moist climate under deciduous or mixed forest, having thin organic and organic-mineral layers overlying a yellowish-brown leached layer resting on an illuvium red layer. Red soils are generally derived from crystalline rock. They are usually poor growing soils, low in nutrients and humus and difficult to cultivate because of its low water holding capacity. Red soils denote the third largest soil group of India covering an area of about 3.5 lakhs sq. km (10.6% of India's area) over the Peninsula from Tamil Nadu in the south to Bundelkhand in the north and Rajmahal hills in the east to Katchch in the west. They surround the red soils on their south, east and north.

Black soil may refer to:Chernozem, fertile black soils found in eastern Europe, Russia, India and the Canadian prairiesMuck (soil), a soil made up primarily of humus from drained swamplandVertisol, dark cracking soils with a high clay content found between 50° N and 45° S of the equatorTerra preta, “black earth” or soil of the Amazon river basin

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