Black Soil (other)
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Black Soil (other)
Black soil may refer to: * Chernozem, fertile black soils found in eastern Europe, Russia, India and the Canadian prairies * Muck (soil), a soil made up primarily of humus from drained swampland * Vertisol, dark cracking soils with a high clay content found between 50° N and 45° S of the equator * Terra preta, "black earth" or soil of the Amazon river basin See also

* Black Earth (other) {{disambig ...
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Chernozem
Chernozem (from rus, чернозём, p=tɕɪrnɐˈzʲɵm, r=chernozyom; "black ground"), also called black soil, is a black-colored soil containing a high percentage of humus (4% to 16%) and high percentages of phosphorus and ammonia compounds. Chernozem is very fertile soil and can produce high agricultural yields with its high moisture storage capacity. Chernozems are a Reference Soil Group of the World Reference Base for Soil Resources (WRB). Distribution The name comes from the Russian terms for black and soil, earth or land (''chorny'' + ''zemlya''). The soil, rich in organic matter presenting a black color, was first identified by Russian geologist Vasily Dokuchaev in 1883 in the tallgrass steppe or prairie of European Russia. Chernozem cover about 230 million hectares of land. There are two "chernozem belts" in the world. One is the Eurasian steppe which extends from eastern Croatia (Slavonia), along the Danube (northern Serbia, northern Bulgaria ( Danubian Pla ...
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