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  1. Till = a sediment that has been transported and deposited by or from glacier ice with little or no sorting by water; usually poorly sorted, commonly massive, may contain striated clasts; till is a glacial diamict.

  2. Chisel plow or secondary tillage equipment such as field cultivator or disks are used to till prior to planting. While some residue remains on the soil surface, disturbance occurs to more than 30% of …

  3. Improved tools, crop cultivars, and practices for organic rotational no-till and mulch-till (≥30% residue cover at planting) that minimize “yield drag” and improve net profits:

  4. o-till also reduces soil loss. On the negative side, getting good seed placement and good stands for a crop like wheat is more challenging with no-till, and there has been a tendency for soils under no-till …

  5. Meltout till characterized by a vague layering of till units separated by thin horizontal partings filled with sand. Supraglaically transported tills typically have angular, non-spherical clasts with a coarse …

  6. The upper till, referred to in this report as the surface till, comprises the rela tively sandy surface tills that form the till sheet of the late Wisconsin glacial epi sode, which extended from about 24,000 BP …

  7. From soil management to pasture/hay management, SMART-TILL"s patented tines help optimize yield by fracturing rather than turning soil.