The in Situ Weathering of a Test Mineral (Vermiculite) Introduced in a Podzol (Haplaquod) and in a Hydromorphic Soil (Haplaquept) Compared to the Soil Clay Minerals Evolution

Author(s):  
D. Righi ◽  
J. Ranger ◽  
C. Felix ◽  
P. Bonnaud ◽  
M. Robert
2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 708 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Tsirambides

The genesis and the physical characteristics of the Neogene red beds of the cedar hills surrounding Thessaloniki are studied in this paper. The peri-urban forest, which covers these hills, has a 3,022 ha area. The topographic relief is smooth and is divided in eight small drainage basins, tapped through small creeks. The elevation of the surrounding hills varies between 85 and 560 m. The dominant land slopes vary between 20 and 55%. All the samples are coarse grained, poorly sorted and friable and present earthy lustre and red colour because of the extensive presence of iron oxides. Angular to sub-angular rock fragments derived from the metamorphic bedrock are very common. Petrographically, the studied red beds belong to the clayey sands. The extended presence (41-66%) of coarse silt and sand size grains (>20 pm) in the samples suggests a mild intensity of in situ weathering of the bedrock. X-ray diffraction analysis of the coarsest fractions 250-20 pm and 20-2 μιτι revealed in decreasing abundance the presence of quartz, feldspars, epidote, micas, chlorite, pyroxenes, amphiboles, and talc. These fractions contain the 2M polytype of mica, while in the fraction <2 pm the 1Μα polytype of illite predominates. In the clay fraction (<2 pm) illite, smectite, and chlorite predominate. The presence of mixed-layer minerals is limited, testifying the almost complete character of hydrolysis of the primary minerals. The formation of red beds took place on low relief land under alternating wet and dry seasons, which prevail in the eastern Mediterranean region since Neogene. The clay minerals are the in situ weathering products of the primary minerals of the greenschists, gneisses and gabbros predominating in the studied area. The extensive presence of clay size grains (11-26%) in the samples, their poor sorting, and their sub-angular morphology, indicate that the red beds are texturally immature. In addition, the abundance of feldspars and Fe-Mg minerals reflects mineralogical immaturity. The low relief and the long-lasting tectonic stability in the Thessaloniki district were essential for the significant thickness of the red beds. The oxygen isotope data of the <0.2 pm fraction (+18.2 to +18.8%o) confirm the pedogenic origin of the clay minerals present. The red beds studied present low plasticity with liquid limit (WÏ) 26.9 to 33.4% and plasticity index (lp) 9.1 to 17.3%. In addition, they have high consolidation index (lc) values (1.03 to 2.28). The swelling potential is low to medium and the activity varies between 0.5 and 1.0. The consolidation and induration degree of the samples analyzed is low, because of the great range of their mineralogical composition and the mild conditions of pressure and temperature to which they have been submitted. The studied red beds are not considered problematic for the foundation of various constructions on them.


2003 ◽  
Vol 40 (6) ◽  
pp. 805-817 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne Marie O'Beirne-Ryan ◽  
Marcos Zentilli

In addition to minor postglacial weathering effects, a complex history of three distinct weathering events has been identified within the granitoids of the South Mountain Batholith of southwestern Nova Scotia. Weathering prior to deposition of Carboniferous strata produced a well-developed saprolite, an in situ weathering profile. Feldspars and micas are altered to clay minerals, and only weak preservation of granitic texture is evident. Subsequent burial and relithification have masked the original weathering mineralogy in this horizon. Beneath Triassic clastic sedimentary rocks is a thick horizon (30 m) of weathered granitoid. This argillaceous saprolite with relict biotite exhibits an intensifying-upward weathering zonation typical of weathered horizons, with increased proportions of clay minerals at the upper levels. A younger arenaceous saprolite of pre-Pleistocene age can be found beneath glacial till at a number of locations throughout the batholith. These paleoweathered horizons attest to relatively warmer climates at several times in the geologic past. Their patterns of preservation imply some were much thicker and more widely distributed before partial erosion. The eroded materials may have formed the sediment for quartz sand in the Carboniferous sequence, clay and silica sand deposits of Cretaceous age, and a sandy till of Pleistocene age. The remnants preserved in situ today serve as significant conduits for water, and the geochemistry, mineralogy, and textures of these weathered profiles may enhance mobility and migration of U and Rn. These weathered horizons are mechanically weak, and the possibility of their presence should be considered when selecting construction and waste-disposal sites.


2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 223-233 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Akkari ◽  
P Aranda ◽  
A. Ben Haj Amara ◽  
E Ruiz-Hitzky

2022 ◽  
Vol 216 ◽  
pp. 106337
Author(s):  
Yunhui Chen ◽  
Liping Wen ◽  
Jinxin Chen ◽  
He'an Luo ◽  
Jikai Liu

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (6) ◽  
pp. 1034-1046 ◽  
Author(s):  
Geoffrey M. Bowers ◽  
John S. Loring ◽  
H. Todd Schaef ◽  
Sydney S. Cunniff ◽  
Eric D. Walter ◽  
...  

Clay Minerals ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 423-437 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Quantin ◽  
J. Gautheyrou ◽  
P. Lorenzoni

AbstractThe weathering of a trachytic pumice within a pyroclastic flow underlying an andic-brown soil on the volcano Vico has been studied. The main mineral formed is a spherical 10 Å halloysite which has been shown by SEM and in situ microprobe analysis to have formed directly from the glass. The major mineralogical characteristics as determined by XRD, IR, DTA, TEM and microdiffraction are typical of 10 Å halloysite. However, some minor mineralogical properties and the high Fe and K contents, suggest that it is an interstratification of 74% halloysite and 26% illite-smectite. The calculated formula of the hypothetical 2:1 minerals reveals an Fe- and K-rich clay, with high tetrahedral substitution, like an Fe-rich vermiculite, but the detailed structure of this mineral remains uncertain.


2019 ◽  
Vol 94 (1) ◽  
pp. 131-144 ◽  
Author(s):  
William I. Ausich ◽  
Mark A. Wilson ◽  
Oive Tinn

AbstractThe Kalana Lagerstätte of early Aeronian (Llandovery, Silurian) age in central Estonia preserves a diverse shallow marine biota dominated by non-calcified algae. This soft-tissue flora and decalcified and calcified crinoids are preserved in situ, in a lens of microlaminated, dolomitized micrite interbedded in a sequence of dolomitized packstones and wackestones. Although the Lagerstätte is dominated by non-calcified algae, crinoids (together with brachiopods and gastropods) are among the most common organisms that were originally comprised of a carbonate skeleton. Two new crinoids are described from this unit, Kalanacrinus mastikae n. gen. n. sp. (large camerate) and Tartucrinus kalanaensis n. gen. n. sp. (small disparid). Interestingly, these two crinoids display contrasting preservation, with the more common large camerate preserved primarily as a decalcified organic residue, whereas the smaller disparid is preserved primarily in calcite. Preservation was assessed using elemental mapping of C, Ca, S, and Si. Columns have the highest portion of Ca, once living soft tissue is indicated by C, S was dispersed as pyrite or associated with organics, and Si is probably associated with clay minerals in the matrix. This new fauna increases our understanding of the crinoid radiation on Baltica following Late Ordovician extinctions.UUID: http://zoobank.org/fb1f98c4-d35a-43f4-aa0d-75e4f8154a13


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