Soil Spectroscopy
Soil spectroscopy is a rapid, non-destructive method that uses the interaction between light and soil to estimate several soil properties.

| Item | Description |
|---|---|
| What it is | A rapid analytical method based on soil reflectance or related optical signals. |
| Main purpose | Fast screening of multiple soil properties from one measurement. |
| Where used | Field and laboratory |
| Typical users | Researchers, advisors, technical field staff |
| Typical outputs | Spectral measurements and predicted property values |
Main target variables
- soil organic carbon / organic matter,
- texture-related variables,
- pH-related variation,
- moisture-sensitive interpretation,
- and broader physicochemical screening.
Descriptor groups supported
- soil organic carbon,
- nutrient and fertility support,
- general soil condition,
- and support for repeated monitoring.
Why users may choose it
Spectroscopy is attractive when users want a fast, multi-variable measurement approach that can be repeated over time.