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Soil Auger

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auger

1. A hand-held carpenter’s tool for boring holes in wood, similar to, but larger than, a gimlet; has a long steel bit usually not larger than 1 in. (25 mm) in diameter.
2. A rotary drill, usually powered, for cutting circular holes in earth or rock.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Architecture and Construction. Copyright © 2003 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Soil Auger

 

instrument for taking soil samples from various depths. On the basis of purpose and operating principle a distinction is made between rotary augers, which are fed into the soil by rotation with simultaneous pressure, and percussion augers, which are introduced into the soil manually by a blow from a hammer or by the pressure of the arm. Rotary augers—the Mal’kov-VIUA (All-Union Research Institute of Fertilizers and Land Reclamation), Izmail’skii, Smertin, and Rozanov augers—are used to take samples of soil without preserving the soil’s structure in order to determine moisture content, acidity, and nutrient content in the soil. Percussion augers, such as the Kachinskii, Negovelov, and Nekrasov augers, extract soil samples and do not disturb the structure, which is essential for determining the volumetric mass and porosity of the soil. When making mass-scale agrochemical analyses in the USSR and other countries, the cane-type hand augers designed by Osipov are used extensively to obtain mixed soil samples.

REFERENCE

Klychnikov, V. M. Agrokhimicheskaia sluzhba v sel’skom khoziaistve. Moscow, 1964. Pages 45-46.

V. M. KLYCHNIKOV

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive
Sydney, Australia, Nov 4, 2010 - (ABN Newswire) - Artemis Resources Limited (ASX:ARV) announced today that a shallow soil auger program at its Yangibana Rare Earth Project in Western Australia has confirmed the prospectivity of the project for rare earth mineralisation.
Use a shovel or a soil auger (see picture at left) and check down to a depth of 8 to 12 inches.
The solution is to install drainage tiles, drill through the obstruction with a soil auger, or plant in containers or raised beds.
Feed annually with a high-nitrogen complete fertilizer; you can bore holes around the tree's drip line with a soil auger and drop in tree fertilizer tablets or use tree food stakes.
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