- A
gleysol or gley soil is a
hydric soil that
unless drained is
saturated with
groundwater for long
enough to
develop a
characteristic gleyic colour pattern...
-
development is seen in most
forest soils except where drainage is poor.
Gleysols and peat bogs
occupy poorly drained areas. Phytogeographically, Finland...
-
Acrisols Andosols Arenosols Cambisols Chernozems Ferralsols Fluvisols Gleysols Greyzems Histosols Kastanozems Lithosols Luvisols Nitosols Phaeozems Planosols...
- leptosols. Most w****ents and
aquic subgroups of
other suborders belong to the
gleysols. In Australia, most
entisols are
known as
rudosols or tenosols. Unweatherable...
-
refer to: Eugène Gley (1857–1930),
French physiologist and
endocrinologist Gleysol, a type of
hydric soil Glay (disambiguation) This
disambiguation page lists...
-
soils are defined.
Humic Gleysols have a dark A
horizon enriched in
organic matter.
Gleysols lack such a horizon.
Luvic Gleysols have a
leached (Ae) horizon...
- nutrient-rich and much less stony, but
poorly drained and
classified as
gleysol. Part of the
island remains in forest,
although housing developments have...
-
usually belong to the
Podzol great soil group. Poor
drainage results in
gleysols and peats.
Regardless of
drainage or classification, the
Basin has deeper...
- are
Cambisols or Umbrisols. Some may be Nitisols. Many
Aquepts belong to
Gleysols and Stagnosols.
Aquepts – with a
water table close to the
surface Anthrepts...
-
aquatic vegetation in Neva. The
river banks mostly consist of sand, podsol,
gleysols, peat, and
boggy peat soils.
Several centuries ago, the
whole territory...