Hardpan can be a problem in
farming and gardening by impeding
drainage of water and restricting the growth of
plant roots. In these situations, the hardpan can be broken up by either mechanical means such as digging or plowing, or through the use of soil amendments. The
broadfork is a manual
tool specifically designed for this task; a
digging fork or a
spade might also be used. The
chisel plow does a similar job with the help of a
tractor. The use of
soil amendments can also be employed to alter the
soil structure and promote the dissolution of the hard pan. It has been observed that increasing the amount of
soil organic matter through the working-in of
manure,
compost or
peat can both improve local drainage and promote the proliferation of
earth worms that can, over time, break relatively thin hardpan layers. More difficult hardpans may be further improved through the action of both adjusting the
soil pH with
lime if the soil is acidic, and with the addition of
gypsum. This combination can help loosen clay particles bound into a hardpan by the actions of hard salts such as
iron,
calcium carbonate and
sodium, by promoting their mobility through a higher pH while proving a suitable source of exchanging minerals (the gypsum). This works because gypsum salts, although not "soft", are still water permeable and have a larger, more open structure, the results of which do not promote as hard a matrix as was replaced. However, unlike when employing mechanical means, breaking a hardpan through the use of amendments may require action over the course of years, and even then one is by no means assured success. The results are primarily determined by how extensive and / or intractable the hardpan is. ==See also==