World Soil Day (WSD) is held annually on 5 th December as a means to focus attention on the importance of healthy soil and advocating for the sustainable management of soil resources.
Did you know that there are more living organisms in a tablespoon of soil than people on Earth? Soil is a world made up of organisms, minerals, and organic components that provides food for humans and animals through plant growth.
Soils are complex mixtures of minerals, water, air, organic matter, and countless organisms that are the decaying remains of once-living things. It forms at the surface of land – it is the “skin of the earth.” Soil is capable of supporting plant life and is vital to life on earth.
We have a considerable number of books about soil and they are used. The preschool are always in the garden digging and the Yr 1 often look in soil as part of a minibeasts unit. The school gardener was often called upon to talk about what was happening in the playground and the worm farm and compost help maintain interest as well.
Some of the best soil books are here, but don't forget to look at worm books because these often speak of soil too.
• Exploring Soils: A Hidden World Underground by Samantha Grover and Camille Heisler
This wonderful book published by the CSIRO is written by soil scientist Samantha Grover and tells the story of James who wants to be a soil scientist. He discovers that soil is not just dirt for digging in, but an essential part of our world. He explores how plants and animals live in soil, how soils are formed, how they differ, and the ways that soil is essential in our lives.
Plants grow in it. Animals live in it. Read more to find out the facts on soil.
• Up in the Garden and Down in the Dirt by Kate Messner and Christopher Silas Neal
Down in the dirt there is a busy world of earthworms digging, snakes hunting, skunks burrowing and all the other animals that make a garden their home. In this exuberant and lyrical book, discover the wonders that lie hidden between stalks.
• Under Your Feet... Soil, Sand and Everything Underground by Wenjia Tang
Learn how one handful of ordinary soil contains more organisms than there are people on Earth, and carry out experiments using dirt from your own back garden.Carl is an earthworm. He spends his days happily tunnelling in the soil until a field mouse asks him a simple question that stops him short: "Why?"
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