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Educational Materials Related to Soil
![[A cartoon image of "Scientific Knowledge Worm." S.K. Worm is the official annelid, or worm, of the USDA Natural Recources Conservation Service.]](images/skworm.jpg) |
Dirt, ground, earth, soil—common names for the remarkably
useful loose stuff that forms where the Earth meets the sky. Because soil is so common, people tend to take it for
granted—to forget that life as we know it could not exist without soil.
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This page provides links to educational materials that teach the significance of soil.
Documents with the
icon require
Adobe Acrobat.
For Young Children
NRCS Activity Book
NRCS Coloring Book
For High School Students
Basics of Soil
From the Surface Down:
An introduction to soil surveys for agronomic use
Activities/Demonstrations
How much soil is there?
Fact sheet
Soil Survey Fact Sheet
What is Soil? (A PowerPoint Presentation)
Soil—What is It?
Poster
Soils of Alabama PosterVideo
Soils of Alabama; #43 in the "Discovering Alabama" series.
Websites
Soil Basics 101: An overview of soils by Texas A&M University.
Tidbits for Teachers and Students: The NRCS site for educational materials
National Soil Survey Science Education Site: Provides links to various
soil information
S.K. Worm Answers Your Questions About Soil: Fun educational site for
children
Dig In, Hands on Soil Investigation: National Science Teachers
Association's book
World Soil Resources: Links to various soil information
History of NRCS: Lots of historical information about the agency that does
the soil survey
Journal Articles
Bama Soil—The Official State Soil of Alabama.
Julie Best. Alabama's
TREASURED Forests, Summer 2001 v20 n3 p28(2).
100 Years of the National Cooperative Soil Survey—and Still Learning.
Julie Best. Alabama's TREASURED Forests, Winter 2000 v9 n1 p10(2).
Dirt.
Joanne Wilke, FALCON, Dec. 1996/Jan. 1997, pp. 34(4).
Tips on Protecting Your Soil.
U.S. Dept. of Agriculture. Feb. 1992, n.p.
She Digs Her Dirty Job.
Diane Stott is a microbiologist who studies dirt
because the world needs soil to produce food. Time for Kids, Jan 6, 1999
p6(1). Used with permission from Time for Kids.
Assault of the earth.
Elena Wilken. World Watch, March-April
1995 v8 n2 p20(8). Used with permission from
Worldwatch. Abstract: Mankind has not been kind to the soil in its pursuit of food.
Over the centuries, farming practices have eroded the soil and led to soil
degradation, leaving farmers with the problem of producing food from sterile
land. With nearly all the 'world's most productive cropland' being
cultivated and a rapidly growing population, mankind needs to enact and
implement soil conservation and soil formation policies to either sustain or
increase the current pace of agricultural production.
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