1st Edition

Soil Clays Linking Geology, Biology, Agriculture, and the Environment

By G. Jock Churchman, Bruce Velde Copyright 2019
    276 Pages 27 Color & 70 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    294 Pages 27 Color & 70 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    294 Pages 27 Color & 70 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    As the human population grows from seven billion toward an inevitable nine or 10 billion, the demands on the limited supply of soils will grow and intensify. Soils are essential for the sustenance of almost all plants and animals, including humans, but soils are virtually infinitely variable. Clays are the most reactive and interactive inorganic compounds in soils. Clays in soils often differ from pure clay minerals of geological origin. They provide a template for most of the reactive organic matter in soils. They directly affect plant nutrients, soil temperature and pH, aggregate sizes and strength, porosity and water-holding capacities.



    This book aims to help improve predictions of important properties of soils through a modern understanding of their highly reactive clay minerals as they are formed and occur in soils worldwide. It examines how clays occur in soils and the role of soil clays in disparate applications including plant nutrition, soil structure, and water-holding capacity, soil quality, soil shrinkage and swelling, carbon sequestration, pollution control and remediation, medicine, forensic investigation, and deciphering human and environmental histories.





    Features:





    • Provides information on the conditions that lead to the formation of clay minerals in soils


    • Distinguishes soil clays and types of clay minerals


    • Describes clay mineral structures and their origins


    • Describes occurrences and associations of clays in soil


    • Details roles of clays in applications of soils


    • Heavily illustrated with photos, diagrams, and electron micrographs


    • Includes user-friendly description of a new method of identification




    To know soil clays is to enable their use toward achieving improvements in the management of soils for enhancing their performance in one or more of their three main functions of enabling plant growth, regulating water flow to plants, and buffering environmental changes. This book provides an easily-read and extensively-illustrated description of the nature, formation, identification, occurrence and associations, measurement, reactivities, and applications of clays in soils.

    Biography

    G. Jock Churchman is adjunct senior lecturer at the University of Adelaide (Australia) and adjunct



    associate professor at the University of South Australia. Jock Churchman’s clay interests began with



    a PhD in chemistry on halloysite at the University of Otago in his native New Zealand, followed



    by industrial ceramic research (1970–1971). He held a postdoctoral fellowship in soil science at the



    University of Wisconsin–Madison (1971–1973) and was employed at the New Zealand Soil Bureau



    (1973–89), then at CSIRO (1989–2003), the University of Adelaide (2003–2012) and the University



    of South Australia (2013–2014). He has also held visiting fellowships in soil science for one year at



    Reading University (UK) and for six months at the University of Western Australia. His research



    has encompassed halloysite; acid dissolution of montmorillonite; dust transport; clay mineral genesis;



    clay–organic complexes; the influence of clay mineralogy on soil physical properties; clays in



    sodic soils; the characteriation of bentonites and their industrial and environmental applications;



    and the philosophy of soil science.



    He has published nearly 150 refereed papers and coedited four books, most recently The Soil



    Underfoot: Infinite Possibilities for a Finite Resource (CRC Press, 2014) and Natural Mineral



    Nanotubes (CRC Press, 2015). He is a former editor (now emeritus) of Applied Clay Science. He



    has received awards from the New Zealand Society of Soil Science, Soil Science Australia, the



    Association Internationale pour l’Étude des Argiles (AIPEA) and the Clay Minerals Society.



     



    Bruce Velde is an emeritus researcher for the Centre Nationale de Recherche Scientifique at the



    Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris. He did his PhD at Montana State University (1962) under the



    direction of John Hower, then he did a postdoctoral study at the Carnegie Geophysical Laboratory



    in Washington DC (1962–1965) after which he joined the CNRS in Paris.



    The initial research subjects treated were the evolution of clay minerals in sediments and sedimentary



    rocks, and their stability under different laboratory conditions of pressure and temperature.



    During the latter period, he published 237 refereed papers, authored and coauthored 8 books on



    clays and their chemical relations in natural situations and advised 22 PhD theses on these subjects.



    His books are Clays and Clay Minerals in Natural and Synthetic Systems (Springer, 1977);



    Introduction to Clay Minerals: Chemistry, Uses and Environmental Significance (Chapman & Hall,



    1992); Archaeological Ceramic Materials: Origin and Utilization (Springer, 1999); Clay Minerals:



    A Physico-Chemical Explanation of Their Occurrence (Elsevier, 2000); Illite: Origins, Evolution



    and Metamorphism (Springer, 2004); The Origin of Clay Minerals in Soils and Weathered Rocks



    (Springer, 2008); Soils, Plants and Clay Minerals: Mineral and Biologic Interactions (Springer,



    2009); Origin and Mineralogy of Clays: Clays and the Environment (edited) (Springer, 2013); and



    Geochemistry at the Earth’s Surface (2016).



    The evolution of his work was to understand the chemical and physical reasons for the variety



    and stability of clay mineral associations from depth towards the surface of the Earth. He also did



    work on the formation of clay-associated structures (