The
granular material on the surface of other celestial bodies.
Lunar soil and
Martian soil are terms in general use that fit within the context of this project.
April 2008 - Two public domain soil profile photographs, uploaded by briefly active
User:Jimjet, deleted as unsourced. Jimjet did not specify that he took the photographs as an employee of USDA, and he did not respond to dispute their removal. Deleted photos were of
George Demas (
Image:GeorgeDemas.png), and a
Paxton (soil) profile (
Image:Paxton Soil.jpg).
{{soil-sci-stub}} Posted to article. Stub articles relating to soil science.
{{soil-stub}} Posted to article. Stub articles relating to soil materials and soil resources. Under development. Currently redirects to {{soil-sci-stub}}.
{{subst:
SoilWelcome|yourusername}}. Posted to new Wikipedia user talk page.
{{subst:
SoilWelcome-anon|yourusername}} Posted to new anon user talk page.
{{subst:
SoilGreeting-new|yourusername}} Posted to user talk page.
{{subst:
SoilGreeting-exp|yourusername}} Posted to experienced user's talk page.
^ Doran, J.W., & Parkin, T.B. (1994) Defining and assessing soil quality. In Defining soil quality for a sustainable environment (SSSA Special publication No 35). Soil Science Society of America, Madison
^"Soils". The New Student's Reference Work. F. E. Compton and Company. 1914. Retrieved 2007-12-17.
^Soil Survey Staff (1999).
"Chapter 1: The Soils That We Classify"(PDF). Soil Taxonomy, A Basic System of Soil Classification for Making and Interpreting Soil Surveys (2nd edition). United States Department of Agriculture - Natural Resources Conservation Service. pp. Page 9. Retrieved 2007-12-17. (Agricultural Handbook 486)