'Clorpt' or 'Corpt' is a
mnemonic for
Hans Jenny's famous
state equation for soil formation:
S = f(cl,o,r,p,t,….)
★ S is for
soil,
★ c (sometimes cl) represents
climate,
★ o
organisms including humans,
★ r
relief,
★ p
parent material, or
lithology, and
★ t
time.
Jenny pointed out that there are two principal methods that the
state equation may be solved: first in a theoretical or conceptual manner by logical deductions from certain premises, and second empirically by experimentation or field observation.
The empirical method is still mostly employed today, and soil formation can be defined by varying a single factor and keeping the other factors constant. This led to the development of empirical models to describe pedogenesis, such as climofunctions, biofunctions, topofunctions, lithofunctions, and chronofunctions. Since
Hans Jenny published his formulation in 1941, it has been used by innumerable
soil surveyors all over the world as a qualitative list for understanding the factors that may be important for producing the soil pattern within a region.
The term ''Clorpt'' is mainly used for empirical quantitative prediction with the purposes of making
digital soil map.
In this approach, the state-factor equation was put explicitly into a spatial framework and the factors were also observed in the same spatial domain. Some people have termed the approach ''environmental correlation'', associated with using stratigraphy,
digital terrain models and gamma radiometric survey, to predict and map soil properties.
See also
★
Digital soil mapping
★
Scorpan
★
Pedometrics
Reference
★
How the five soil forming factors--climate, organic matter, relief, parent material, and time (CLORPT) influence the type of soil
★
Soil on earthsci.org