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The role of microaggregation in physical edaphology

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dc.creator Mtakwa, Peter W
dc.date 2022-10-24T07:17:45Z
dc.date 2022-10-24T07:17:45Z
dc.date 1993
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-25T08:51:17Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-25T08:51:17Z
dc.identifier http://www.suaire.sua.ac.tz/handle/123456789/4713
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/91221
dc.description PhD Thesis
dc.description Soil type and the previous tensile strength and penetration resistance as a (PR) should allow the soil compared ranging fail to failure planes in between the microaggregates. function of easily along Five Tanzanian soil hardsetting Paleustalf from a extreme of strength behaviour, through a Paleudoll, Paleustult, both It was expected (the strength characteristics). that microaggregation types were can I characterized soil strength by measuring affect soil strength. matric potential cultivation history of one at Paleudalf and a to a strongly microaggregated Orthox expected to be at At each site soils that had a history of the weak end of the scale. 7 or more years of cultivation and cropping were compared with newly cultivated soils. The and Orthox Paleustult had the best PR characteristic for ease of root growth and the Paleustalf had the worst characteristic which suggested that it would not permit root growth at matric suctions exceeding 100 kPa. The Orthox also had much the most favourable tensile strength characteristic. At air dryness (100 MPa suction), the previously uncultivated and previously cultivated Orthox topsoils strength. compressive) Paleustalf topsoils. Paleustult) a previous had 3 and respectively, 9 times than less the tensile (and corresponding For three of the soils (Orthox, Paleudoll and history of cultivation was found to have significantly and substantially reduced the tensile strength of the topsoil at any given matric suction compared to the newly cultivated soil
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en
dc.publisher Sokoine University of Agriculture
dc.subject microaggregation
dc.subject edaphology
dc.subject physical edaphology
dc.title The role of microaggregation in physical edaphology
dc.type Thesis


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