In areas affected by drought, residents may be seeing more cracks in their soil. Are these serious?
According to Eric Brevik, a professor at Dickinson State University, some soils have a high content of clay minerals known as smectites (sometimes known as the Montmorillonite group). When smectite clays get wet, water moves into a space between the structural units that make up the clay mineral. The presence of the water molecules pushes the structural units apart, causing the clay mineral to expand, or swell.
When these clays dry out, the water molecules are removed from the inter-structural spaces and the clays shrink. When this shrinking takes place in millions of clay structural units in a volume of soil, the shrinking can be enough to create large cracks in the soil. Soils with a high shrink-swell clay content are known as Vertisols.
Vertisols are found in several places in the United States, including the Gulf Coastal Plain of Texas, the Mississippi River Valley from Illinois to the Gulf Coast, central Montana, western South Dakota, and the Red River Valley of North Dakota and Minnesota. Other major Vertisol regions in the world include central India, eastern Australia, and eastern Sudan and South Sudan.
Vertisol |
For more information about soils and gardening, conservation, food, and more, visit the Soils Matter blog sponsored by the Soil Science Society of America at soilsmatter.wordpress.com. SSSA also has public information on its website, soils.org/discover-soils.
Soilsmatter blog from the Soil Science Society of America
Yes, we have expansive clays in the Las Vegas Valley and they can be problems for roads, buildings and utilities.
Septic systems and expansive soils
Damage to foundations from expansive soils
Viragrow Delivers!
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