ANNEX I - PHOTOGRAPHS OF SOIL PROFILES

All photographs by courtesy of the International Soil Reference and Information Centre (ISRIC), International Soil Museum, PO Box 353, 6700 AJ Wageningen, the Netherlands.

The international classification of the soil is provided in parentheses, for information. FAO. 1974. FAO-Unesco Soil map of the world (1:5 000 000), Volume I: Legend. Paris, Unesco.59 p.

Photograph 1
Photograph 2
  Master horizons and subhorizons are well defined in this soil profile. There is accumulation of organic matter in horizons A, B 1 and B 2. The eluvial E-horizon has a much lighter colour due to leaching (humic podzol).
 
  A lateritic soil typical of the humid tropics. In this case, there has been no ground-water influence within the 0- to 125- cm zone where there is neither plinthite nor hard concretions. The B-horizon is a reddish sandy loam relatively rich in iron salts and with at least 15 percent clay (orthic ferralsol, Zambia) . See also Photograph 9.

Photograph 3
Photograph 4
  A deep tropical soil with two well- defined master horizons, A and B. This last horizon contains enough clay to reduce its permeability to a reasonably low value (chromic cambisol, Botswana).
 
  Freshwater acid sulphate soil developed in a river plain from recent alluvial deposits. The hydromorphic conditions are here characterized by conspicuous yellow mottles in the bottom part of the B-horizon (B2). These mottles are made of an iron sulphate compound, jarosite, formed through exposure to the air and bacterial activity from a mineral containing iron and sulphur, pyrite. The C-horizon is reduced (thionic fluvisol, Thailand).

Photograph 5
Photograph 6
  Black cotton soil commonly found in relatively dry, warm climates. It is characterized by a high content of very fine clay (montmorillonite), a low content of organic matter and a very dark colour, sometimes reddish. When dry, such soils develop cracks from the surface downward; which at some period in most years are at least 1 cm wide to a depth of 50 cm. They are called regur in India and tir in Morocco (pellic vertisol, Botswana).
 
  Peat soil, with the organic H-horizon formed or forming from accumulation of organic matter deposited on the surface, that is saturated with water for long periods (dystric histosol, Ireland)

Photograph 7
  A soil profile showing the influence of ground water within 50 cm of the surface. The hydromorphic properties are characterized by mottles in the top part of the B- horizon (B1) and the dull greyish colour of the reduced part of the B- horizon (B2). The latter is a sign of drainage trouble for a good part of the year. The C-horizon is also reduced (eutric gleysol).
 

Photograph 8
  The B-horizon is rich in clay. Down from 75 cm, red mottles are made of plinthite. This is a firm, iron-rich clay which becomes irreversibly hard when exposed to repeated wetting and drying, forming an ironstone hardpan - see Photograph 9 (plinthic acrisol, Nigeria).
 

Photograph 9
  A lateritic soil commonly found in tropical and subtropical climates where dry and humid conditions alternate. The B- horizon is enriched in clay and in iron salts. Down from 70 cm, it shows an ironstone hardpan, a continuous rock-like layer made by irreversibly hardened plinthite where iron compounds are the primary cementing agents (ferric acrisol, Nigeria).
 

Photograph 10
Photograph 11
  10. Granular structure
in a B-horizon.
 
  11. Crumb structure in an A-horizon.

Photograph 12
Photograph 13
  12. Subangular blocky structure in a B-horizon.
 
  13. Prismatic structure in a B-horizon