Abstract

Soil color and mineralogy are used as diagnostic criteria to distinguish different soil types. In the literature, 350–2500 nm spectra were successfully used to predict soil color and mineralogy, but these attributes currently are not mapped for most Brazilian soils. In this paper, we provided the first large-extent maps with 30 m resolution of soil color and mineralogy at three depth intervals for 850,000 km2 of Midwest Brazil. We obtained soil 350–2500 nm spectra from 1397 sites of the Brazilian Soil Spectral Library at 0–20 cm, 20–60, and 60–100 cm depths. Spectra was used to derive Munsell hue, value, and chroma, and also second derivative spectra of the Kubelka–Munk function, where key spectral bands were identified and their amplitude measured for mineral quantification. Landsat composites of topsoil and vegetation reflectance, together with relief and climate data, were used as covariates to predict Munsell color and Fe–Al oxides, and 1:1 and 2:1 clay minerals of topsoil and subsoil. We used random forest for soil modeling and 10-fold cross-validation. Soil spectra and remote sensing data accurately mapped color and mineralogy at topsoil and subsoil in Midwest Brazil. Hematite showed high prediction accuracy (R2 > 0.71), followed by Munsell value and hue. Satellite topsoil reflectance at blue spectral region was the most relevant predictor (25% global importance) for soil color and mineralogy. Our maps were consistent with pedological expert knowledge, legacy soil observations, and legacy soil class map of the study region.

Highlights

  • The color is the most noticeable feature of soil that can be determined in field or laboratory [1]

  • Soil organic matter causes the darkness of soil by decreasing the Munsell value and chroma [4]

  • The reflectance in the visible spectral interval revealed that in our dataset the soil color ranged from 8.9 R to 2.5 Y, and reached more than 50% of samples

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Summary

Introduction

The color is the most noticeable feature of soil that can be determined in field or laboratory [1]. The main factors that influence soil color are the organic matter [2] and mineralogy, especially iron oxides [3]. Goethite is common in diverse climates and parent materials, while hematite is abundant in well-drained tropical soils with strong pigmenting effect and is absent in young soils from temperate humid climates [1,5]. When iron oxides are completely removed (after reduction processes) from soil particles under anaerobic conditions, and if organic matter is negligible, the soil matrix achieves the background color of the minerals resulting in shades of gray [3]. In tropical soils, mineralogy cannot be inferred from color alone because hematite has a stronger pigmenting effect than the other soil minerals, including goethite [9]

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