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- Q2003953 subject Q7353747.
- Q2003953 subject Q8910561.
- Q2003953 abstract "A Calcisol in the FAO World Reference Base for Soil Resources is a soil with a substantial secondary accumulation of lime. Calcisols are common in calcareous parent materials and widespread in arid and semi-arid environments. Formerly Calcisols were internationally known as Desert soils and Takyrs.Calcisols are developed in mostly alluvial, colluvial and aeolian deposits of base-rich weathering material. They are found on level to hilly land in arid and semi-arid regions. The natural vegetation is sparse and dominated by xerophytic shrubs and trees and/or ephemeral grasses.Dryness, and in places also stoniness and/or the presence of a shallow petrocalcic horizon, limit the suitability of Calcisols for agriculture. If irrigated, drained (to prevent salinisation) and fertilised, Calcisols can be highly productive under a wide variety of crops. Hilly areas with Calcisols are predominantly used for low volume grazing of cattle, sheep and goats.Many Calcisols occur together with Solonchaks that are actually salt-affected Calcisols and/or with other soils with secondary accumulation of lime that do not key out as Calcisols. The total Calcisol area may well amount to some 10 million square kilometres, nearly all of it in the arid and semi-arid (sub)tropics of both hemispheres.".
- Q2003953 thumbnail Calcisol.png?width=300.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q10884.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q11193.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q11254.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q1152275.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q124196.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q1330709.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q1367330.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q17005941.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q179177.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q21192952.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q212337.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q215501.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q215839.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q2167138.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q250423.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q282070.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q2912818.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q2934.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q386963.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q42295.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q431543.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q43261.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q6185405.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q7353747.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q7368.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q82151.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q830.
- Q2003953 wikiPageWikiLink Q8910561.
- Q2003953 comment "A Calcisol in the FAO World Reference Base for Soil Resources is a soil with a substantial secondary accumulation of lime. Calcisols are common in calcareous parent materials and widespread in arid and semi-arid environments. Formerly Calcisols were internationally known as Desert soils and Takyrs.Calcisols are developed in mostly alluvial, colluvial and aeolian deposits of base-rich weathering material. They are found on level to hilly land in arid and semi-arid regions.".
- Q2003953 label "Calcisol".
- Q2003953 depiction Calcisol.png.