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Soil classification is a long-deb ated issue. The first scien- tific version of the soil classi fication system developed by Vasily Dokuchaev w as published in 1886. In 1962, Muir assessed the A Glossary of Terms Used in Soil Survey and Classification (PDF; Universal Soil Classification System - a Working Group under Commission 1.4 (Soil Classification) The WRB borrows heavily from modern soil classification concepts, including Soil Taxonomy, the legend for the FAO Soil Map of the World 1988, the Référentiel Pédologique resources. The FAO approach differs from most other land evaluation systems in three major aspects: While the former systems constituted often a direct follow up of soil surveys and soil inventory studies, becoming thus in the first place a soil survey interpretation, the FAO system started from the other end, i.e. the land use in Keys to Soil Taxonomy incorporates all changes approved since the publication in 1999 of the second edition of Soil Taxonomy: A Basic System of Soil Classification for Making and Interpreting Soil Surveys. The authors of the Keys to Soil Taxonomy are identified as the "Soil Survey Staff." This rules and systems of soil description and soil classification led to the development of various soil classification concepts, e.g. the FAO-UNESCO Legend for the Soil Map of the World (FAO-UNESCO, 1974, 1988) and Soil Taxonomy (USDA Soil Survey Staff 1975, 1999), and soil maps, e.g. the Soil Map of the World (FAO- The origin of soil classification People were managing soils for ages. Of course, from the very beginning of the agrarian civilization they noted that the soils are different (Yaalon 2008). This knowledge then was then used by the governors for evaluating land value and, consequently, the taxes. The earliest known soil classification system in FAO soil classification The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) developed a supra-national classification, which offers useful generalizations about pedogenesis in relation to the interactions between the main soil-forming factors. It was first published in form of the UNESCO Soil Map of the World (1974) (scale 1 : 5 M.). The classification system of the FAO primarily involves a two-level nomenclature comprising the name of a soil group and a modifying adjective that serves to identify a soil unit within a group on the FAO Soil Map of the World. It is not meant to substitute for national soil classification systems such as the U.S. Soil Taxonomy but instead is designed to facilitate comparisons among these systems. Ways forward for a Universal Soil Classification System • Very positive responses from many sectors of soil scientific community • IUSS Backing (President, Sec. General, Deputy Sec. General, incoming pres, chair of Divisions) • Classification system that are already 'universal' will continue to improve • We will not start from scratch The FAO soil classification system is based on the Legend for the Soil Map of the world (FAO/UNESCO, 1974 ). The FAO legend was largely based on the diagnostic horizon approach developed under Soil Taxonomy (Soil Survey Staff, 1960) by the USDA during the 1950s and 1960s. Contemporary soil classification systems (including Soil Taxonomy) are very poor for topsoil assessments Ochric horizon is a "garbage can" for different topsoil types USC should take into account the real diversity of topsoils of the world Important Information Re

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