Click on “Download PDF” for the PDF version or on the title for the HTML version. If you are not an ASABE member or if your employer has not arranged for access to the full-text, Click here for options. The Soil Information SystemPublished by the American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers, St. Joseph, Michigan www.asabe.org Citation: Paper number 021092, 2002 ASAE Annual Meeting . (doi: 10.13031/2013.9146) @2002Authors: Daniel J. Rooney, Marek Dudka, Mark Cheyne, John R. Samuelson Keywords: soil information, wireless soil and topography mapping, sensors, penetrometer, Internet The collection and analysis of soil information in an efficient and effective manner at a field or sitespecific scale is a scientific and technical challenge. Resource managers often have access to highresolution airborne and spaceborne imagery or other landscape attributes, but detailed soil and topographic information has become a major limiting factor for high intensity land use and management practices. The mapping of soil at a scale larger than 1:12,000 requires the collection of soil samples, their laboratory analysis, documentation, and association with landscape position for the creation of maps. Often, additional excursions to the field are necessary to supplement previously collected data. This iterative procedure is time consuming, expensive, and often subjective. The amount of data obtained is not sufficient to characterize soil properties and their variability at a field or site-specific scale. A real-time, mobile Soil Information System SIS) is being developed to improve the process of performing high intensity soil surveys and site investigations. (Download PDF) (Export to EndNotes)
|