Reference soil South Africa 21: Alisol
Alisols occur in the tropics and subtropics, and in the warm temperate regions of the world in relatively young landscapes. The high level of exchangeable aluminium in these soils is caused by rapid weathering of secondary high-activity clays such as vermiculite and smectite.
Characteristics
Soils having an argic horizon (a subsurface horizon with distinct higher clay content than the overlying horizon), which has a cation exchange capacity of 24 cmolc per kg clay or more, and which starts either within 100 cm from the soil surface, or within 200 cm from the soil surface if the argic horizon is overlain by loamy sand or coarser textures throughout. They have "alic" properties (high content of exchangeable aluminium) in the major part between 25 and 100 cm from the soil surface; moreover, only such diagnostic horizons as an ochric, albic, andic, ferric, nitic, plinthic, or vertic horizon are present.
Reference soil ZA021: Alisols
BRIEF CHARACTERIZATION OF THE SOIL: A very dark reddish brown topsoil, rich in organic matter and extending down to 90 cm, overlies, via a transitional horizon, a red subsoil with below 150 cm fragments of weathering arkose. The soil is very porous throughout and shows in many parts a characteristic polyhedral ("nut") structure. Top 18 cm are disturbed by ploughing. PARENT ROCK: Table Mountain sandstone Formation. ADDITIONAL NOTES ON PROFILE DESCRIPTION: ABh - mottles are dark. The soil shows (on drying) vertical cracks (2 mm wide), 10-20 cm apart. below 150cm: white mottles (weathering Table Mountain Sandstone).