Vasily Vasilevich Dokuchaev is commonly regarded as the father of
soil science, the study of soils in their natural setting. He developed soil science in Russia and was perhaps the first to conduct broad geographical investigations of different soil types. His contribution to science figuratively "put soils on the map". He introduced the idea that other variables could explain the geographical variations in
soil type besides geological factors (
parent material), such as climatic and topographic factors, and by the duration of
pedogenesis (soil formation). He developed the very first
soil classification, using these ideas as a starting point. His ideas were taken up by many soil scientists, including
Hans Jenny. Dokuchaev's work on soil science produced a system of soil classification that described
five factors for soil formation. He arrived at his theory after extensive field studies on Russian soils in 1883. His most famous work is
Russian Chernozem (1883). As a result of Dokuchaev's research, many Russian terms became part of the international soil science vocabulary (for example,
chernozem,
podsol,
gley,
solonets). A
crater on
Mars is named after him, and the Dokuchaev Award, an equivalent of the
Nobel Prize in the field of Soil Science, was instituted by the International Union of Soil Sciences in his honor. == Quote ==