WORKING GROUP 3
CURTIS
157
soils into drainage classes, i.e. excessive, free, imperfect, poor and very poor.
The classes are determined by profile characteristics, especially the degree of
mottling and gleying [Soil Survey Staff, 1960]. Although these characteristics
are useful diagnostic features it is not certain that groupings derived from them
form natural units. Therefore the surface conditions may not be wholly in
accord with these groups. This situation was encountered in an assessment of
the accuracy of photo interpretation of drainage classes made by the writer.
An area of morainic drift country lying between Walton and Healaugh in
Yorkshire was studied. A map showing areas of a. freely drained; b. imper
fectly drained; c. poorly and very poorly drained soils was first produced by
interpretation. The area was subsequently mapped on foot and the accuracy
of interpretation was measured with a planimeter. The results were as follows:
Areas of each drainage class interpreted as:
determined by field
observations
mapped
in field
Freely drained
Imperfectly drained
Poorly to very
poorly drained
acres
acres
% of total
acres
% of total
acres
% of total
Freely drained
813
497
61.1
286
35.2
30
3.7
Imperfectly drained
Poorly and very
1015
—
—
785 *)
77.3
—
~
poorly drained
276
4
1.5
62
18.8
220
79.7
*) The remaining 230 acres were interpreted as freely or poorly and very poorly drained
which were present in about equal proportions.
In this example the surface characteristics showed a better correlation with
the boundaries of poorly and very poorly drained soil profiles than with freely
and imperfectly drained profiles. For interpretation purposes it would be
better to abandon profile drainage characteristics and adopt instead surface
drainage characteristics. For example soils can be grouped on photographs
according to the surface drainage of the site, e.g. Shedding Sites, Normal Sites,
Receiving Sites, etc. [Soil Survey Staff, 1960]. If photo interpretation is to
play its full part in aiding soil surveys a new approach to the definition of soil
mapping units must be sought.
References
American Society of Photogrammetry (1960). Manual of Photographic Interpretation.
Soil Survey Staff (1951). Soil Survey Manual.
Soil Survey Staff (1960). Soil Classification: a comprehensive system, 7th Approximation.
Pomerening, J. A. and M. G. Cline (1953). The accuracy of soil maps produced by various
methods that use aferial photo interpretation. Photogrammetric Engineering, 19.
Avery, B. W. (1956). A classification of British Soils. Transactions VI International Congress
of Soil Science.
Buringh, P. (1954). The analysis and interpretation of aerial photographs in soil survey and
land classification. Netherlands Journal of Agricultural Science. Voi. 2. No. I.
Veenenbos, J. S. (1956). Small-scale pedological analysis and map compilation. Transactions
VI International Congress of Soil Science.