2007
DOI: 10.2136/sssaj2006.0211
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In Situ Characterization of Soil Clay Content with Visible Near‐Infrared Diffuse Reflectance Spectroscopy

Abstract: Visible and near‐infrared (VNIR, 400–2500 nm) diffuse reflectance spectroscopy (DRS) is a rapid, proximal‐sensing method that has proven useful in quantifying constituents of dried and ground soil samples. Very little is known, however, about how DRS performs in a field setting on soils scanned in situ. The overall goal of this research was to evaluate the feasibility of VNIR‐DRS for in situ quantification of clay content of soil from a variety of parent materials. Seventy‐two soil cores were obtained from six… Show more

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Cited by 199 publications
(143 citation statements)
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“…In general, when compared to the validation indexes from other studies that used proximal sensors, the models in our study performed well. In the studies of [33,[70][71][72], the RMSE values range from 2.66 to 7.9, which is similar to the RMSE values of our study. Table 5.…”
Section: Soil Particle Size Distribution Predictive Modelssupporting
confidence: 88%
“…In general, when compared to the validation indexes from other studies that used proximal sensors, the models in our study performed well. In the studies of [33,[70][71][72], the RMSE values range from 2.66 to 7.9, which is similar to the RMSE values of our study. Table 5.…”
Section: Soil Particle Size Distribution Predictive Modelssupporting
confidence: 88%
“…There is no evidence of RMSE values much lower than 2% in studies limited to even smaller regional, farm or field scale calibrations (Malley et al, 2000;Viscarra Rossel et al, 2006c;Waiser et al, 2007;Wetterlind et al, 2008a,b), although in these cases RMSE values were among the lowest published (Table 3) and RPD values usually higher than 2 and in some cases close to three 3. …”
Section: Soil Texturementioning
confidence: 95%
“…Under in-situ measurement conditions, additional challenges associated with the variation of soil-to-sensor distance affect the accuracy of the measurement [8,9]. In addition, a wide range of soil spectral measurements are being gathered around the globe, which return different results as they have been collected with different protocols, sampling techniques, sample preparation, instrument specifications, spectral acquisition and analytical algorithms, and can severely affect the prediction performance of spectroscopic models and outputs [4,10,11].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%