Soil legacy data rescue via GlobalSoilMap and other international and national initiatives
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Authors
Leenaars, Johan G. B.
Richer-de-Forges, Anne C.
Adhikari, Kabindra
Ballabio, Cristiano
Greve, Mogens
Grundy, Mike
Guerrero, Eliseo
Hempel, Jon
Hengl, Tomislav
Heuvelink, Gerard
Batjes, Niels
Carvalho, Eloi
Hartemink, Alfred
Hewitt, Alan
Hong, Suk-Young
Krasilnikov, Pavel
Lagacherie, Philippe
Lelyk, Glen
Libohova, Zamir
Lilly, Allan
McBratney, Alex
McKenzie, Neil
Vasquez, Gustavo M.
Mulder, Vera Leatitia
Minasny, Budiman
Montanarella, Luca
Odeh, Inakwu
Padarian, Jose
Poggio, Laura
Roudier, Pierre
Saby, Nicolas
Savin, Igor
Searle, Ross
Solbovoy, Vladimir
Thompson, James
Smith, Scott
Sulaeman, Yiyi
Vintila, Ruxandra
Viscarra Rossel, Raphael
Wilson, Peter
Zhang, Gan-Lin
Swerts, Martine
Oorts, Katrien
Karklins, Aldis
Feng, Liu
Ibelles Navarro, Alexandro R.
Levin, Arkadiy
Laktionova, Tetiana
Dell'Acqua, Martin
Suvannang, Nopmanee
Ruam, Waew
Prasad, Jagdish
Patil, Nitin
Husnjak, Stjepan
Pásztor, László
Okx, Joop
Hallett, Stephen H.
Keay, Caroline
Farewell, Timothy
Lilja, Harri
Juilleret, Jérôme
Marx, Simone
Takata, Yusuke
Kazuyuki, Yagi
Mansuy, Nicolas
Panagos, Panos
van Liedekerke, Mark
Skalsky, Rastislav
Sobocka, Jaroslava
Kobza, Josef
Eftekhari, Kamran
Kacem Alavipanah, Seyed
Moussadek, Rachid
Badraoui, Mohamed
Da Silva, Mayesse
Paterson, Garry
da Conceição Gonçalves, Maria
Theocharopoulos, Sid
Yemefack, Martin
Tedou, Silatsa
Vrscaj, Borut
Grob, Urs
Kozák, Josef
Boruvka, Lubos
Dobos, Endre
Taboada, Miguel
Moretti, Lucas
Rodriguez, Dario
Supervisor/s
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Abstract
Legacy soil data have been produced over 70 years in nearly all countries of the world. Unfortunately, data, information and knowledge are still currently fragmented and at risk of getting lost if they remain in a paper format. To process this legacy data into consistent, spatially explicit and continuous global soil information, data are being rescued and compiled into databases. Thousands of soil survey reports and maps have been scanned and made available online. The soil profile data reported by these data sources have been captured and compiled into databases. The total number of soil profiles rescued in the selected countries is about 800,000. Currently, data for 117, 000 profiles are compiled and harmonized according to GlobalSoilMap specifications in a world level database (WoSIS). The results presented at the country level are likely to be an underestimate. The majority of soil data is still not rescued and this effort should be pursued. The data have been used to produce soil property maps. We discuss the pro and cons of top-down and bottom-up approaches to produce such maps and we stress their complementarity. We give examples of success stories. The first global soil property maps using rescued data were produced by a top-down approach and were released at a limited resolution of 1 km in 2014, followed by an update at a resolution of 250 m in 2017. By the end of 2020, we aim to deliver the first worldwide product that fully meets the GlobalSoilMap specifications.