Mine soil genesis and tall fescue nutrient status as a function of overburden type and cultural amendment

Natural soils in the Appalachian coal mining region occur on steep slopes and are often thin, rocky, acidic, and/or infertile. This often makes use of natural topsoil for surface coal mine reclamation impractical. Sandstone (SS) and siltstone (SiS) topsoil substitute materials in mixed and pure trea...

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Main Author: Roberts, Jesse Allen
Other Authors: Agronomy
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/91065
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-910652020-09-26T05:37:02Z Mine soil genesis and tall fescue nutrient status as a function of overburden type and cultural amendment Roberts, Jesse Allen Agronomy LD5655.V855 1986.R622 Reclamation of land Mineral industries -- Environmental aspects Fescue Natural soils in the Appalachian coal mining region occur on steep slopes and are often thin, rocky, acidic, and/or infertile. This often makes use of natural topsoil for surface coal mine reclamation impractical. Sandstone (SS) and siltstone (SiS) topsoil substitute materials in mixed and pure treatments were compared to ascertain their effects on soil genesis and tall fescue (Festuca arundinaceae Schrab.) growth in a rock mix study. A second surface amendment experiment with similar objectives was established and contained treatments of sawdust, topsoil, a control, and four rates of sewage sludge. Soil pH, extractable P, and coarse fragment contents decreased at the soil surface from 1982 to 1984. The CEC decreased from 1982 to 1983 due to leaching of cations solubilized from carbonates, but stabilized by 1984. Soil total-N and water availability increased from 1982 to 1984. Particle size distributions changed as sand and >2 mm sized materials weathered into silt and clay sized particles. As sand contents decreased over time, silt contents increased. Morphologically distinct A horizons developed in these soils rapidly and were formed primarily by plant rooting and organic matter additions. Treatment application, topsoil substitute placement, and grading also created morphologically distinct horizons. Fescue biomass production indicates topsoil substitutes support more vigorous vegetative growth than topsoil, especially when topsoils are mixtures of subsoil and A horizons. Biomass production was primarily limited by N, P, and water availability. Blended rock mixes consistently supported higher biomass production than pure SS and SiS treatments. Municipal sewage sludge applied at rates-56 Mg/ha equaled or exceeded inorganic fertilization for establishment and maintenance of tall fescue stands, and did not cause heavy metal phytotoxicity. M.S. 2019-07-03T18:56:46Z 2019-07-03T18:56:46Z 1986 Thesis Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/91065 en_US OCLC# 15555229 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ xii, 181 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1986.R622
Reclamation of land
Mineral industries -- Environmental aspects
Fescue
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1986.R622
Reclamation of land
Mineral industries -- Environmental aspects
Fescue
Roberts, Jesse Allen
Mine soil genesis and tall fescue nutrient status as a function of overburden type and cultural amendment
description Natural soils in the Appalachian coal mining region occur on steep slopes and are often thin, rocky, acidic, and/or infertile. This often makes use of natural topsoil for surface coal mine reclamation impractical. Sandstone (SS) and siltstone (SiS) topsoil substitute materials in mixed and pure treatments were compared to ascertain their effects on soil genesis and tall fescue (Festuca arundinaceae Schrab.) growth in a rock mix study. A second surface amendment experiment with similar objectives was established and contained treatments of sawdust, topsoil, a control, and four rates of sewage sludge. Soil pH, extractable P, and coarse fragment contents decreased at the soil surface from 1982 to 1984. The CEC decreased from 1982 to 1983 due to leaching of cations solubilized from carbonates, but stabilized by 1984. Soil total-N and water availability increased from 1982 to 1984. Particle size distributions changed as sand and >2 mm sized materials weathered into silt and clay sized particles. As sand contents decreased over time, silt contents increased. Morphologically distinct A horizons developed in these soils rapidly and were formed primarily by plant rooting and organic matter additions. Treatment application, topsoil substitute placement, and grading also created morphologically distinct horizons. Fescue biomass production indicates topsoil substitutes support more vigorous vegetative growth than topsoil, especially when topsoils are mixtures of subsoil and A horizons. Biomass production was primarily limited by N, P, and water availability. Blended rock mixes consistently supported higher biomass production than pure SS and SiS treatments. Municipal sewage sludge applied at rates-56 Mg/ha equaled or exceeded inorganic fertilization for establishment and maintenance of tall fescue stands, and did not cause heavy metal phytotoxicity. === M.S.
author2 Agronomy
author_facet Agronomy
Roberts, Jesse Allen
author Roberts, Jesse Allen
author_sort Roberts, Jesse Allen
title Mine soil genesis and tall fescue nutrient status as a function of overburden type and cultural amendment
title_short Mine soil genesis and tall fescue nutrient status as a function of overburden type and cultural amendment
title_full Mine soil genesis and tall fescue nutrient status as a function of overburden type and cultural amendment
title_fullStr Mine soil genesis and tall fescue nutrient status as a function of overburden type and cultural amendment
title_full_unstemmed Mine soil genesis and tall fescue nutrient status as a function of overburden type and cultural amendment
title_sort mine soil genesis and tall fescue nutrient status as a function of overburden type and cultural amendment
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/91065
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