Universal Soil Loss Equation
An Historic Landmark of Agricultural Engineering
A = R K L S C P
The Universal Soil Loss Equation (USLE) was developed at the USDA National
Runoff and Soil Loss Data Center at Purdue University in a national effort led
by Walter H. Wischmeier and Dwight D. Smith. The USLE was published in 1965 in
USDA Agriculture Handbook 282.
The USLE is based on extensive erosion data from studies throughout the USA, and
provides a quick approach to estimating long-term average annual soil loss (A).
The equation is comprised of six factors: R - rainfall and runoff; K - soil
erodibility; L - slope length; S - slope steepness; C - cover and management;
and P - support practice. USLE was the first empirical erosion equation that
was not tied to a specific region of the United States, thus the title
Universal Soil Loss Equation.
The USLE has been used in more than 100 countries to guide conservation
planning, assess soil erosion for conservation policy development, and estimate
sediment yield. It has helped to save millions of tons of soil, thus helping to
feed the worlds population, and to protect the environment from sediment
produced by soil erosion.
DEDICATED BY THE
AMERICAN SOCIETY OF AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERS
2003