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29 - Soil Survey: a Field-Based Science

from Part II - Essays: Inspiring Fieldwork

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2020

Tim Burt
Affiliation:
Durham University
Des Thompson
Affiliation:
Scottish Natural Heritage
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Summary

Although I spent much of my pre-school and school years wandering around derelict industrial sites in Scotland’s central belt, I was also exposed to rural life on a regular basis during the school holidays, when I attended Lanark Auction market with my father. I had developed an interest in geography at school and decided to study it at the University of Strathclyde’s Geography Department. It was there that my interest in soils grew and was nurtured by Donald Davidson but it was a visit to the department by John Bibby, one of the senior soil surveyors in the Soil Survey of Scotland, that finally opened my eyes to the possibility of combining geography and soil science by joining the Soil Survey. Being able to wander the Scottish countryside, far from the industrial wasteland, and map soils seemed like the ideal job. Indeed, Bob Glentworth, Head of the Soil Survey of Scotland, often told his field staff that they were lucky to be getting paid to enjoy themselves digging holes and mapping soils. So, in 1980, armed with a degree in geography and biology and with some knowledge of hydrology, geomorphology, pedology, biogeography and plant science, I applied for and was accepted as a junior soil surveyor in the Soil Survey Department of the Macaulay Institute for Soil Research. Thus, my training in how to survey soils began.

Type
Chapter
Information
Curious about Nature
A Passion for Fieldwork
, pp. 246 - 252
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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References

Boorman, D. B., Hollis, J. M. and Lilly, A. (1995). Hydrology of Soil Types: A Hydrologically-Based Classification of the Soils of the United Kingdom. Institute of Hydrology Report No.126. Institute of Hydrology, Wallingford.Google Scholar
Lilly, A. and Baggaley, N. J. (2013). The potential for Scottish cultivated topsoils to lose or gain soil organic carbon. Soil Use and Management 29, 3947.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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Smith, J. U., Gottschalk, P., Bellarby, J., et al. (2010). Estimating changes in national soil carbon stocks using ECOSSE. Part II. Application. Climate Research 45, 193205.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tipping, E., Davies, J. A. C., Henrys, P. A., et al. (2017). Long-term increases in soil carbon due to ecosystem fertilization by atmospheric nitrogen deposition demonstrated by regional-scale modelling and observations. Scientific Reports 7, 1890; DOI:10.1038/s41598–017-02002-w.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Toberman, H., Tipping, E. W., Boyle, J. F., et al. (2015). Dependence of ombrotrophic peat nitrogen on phosphorus and climate. Biogeochemistry 125, 1120.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wylie, C. E., Shaw, D. J., Fordyce, F. M., et al. (2016). Equine grass sickness in Scotland: a case control study of environmental geochemical risk factors. Equine Veterinary Journal 48, 779785.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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