Clay mineralogy of soils formed in tuffaceous greywacke, Southland, New Zealand, in relation to genesis, soil properties and classification

Soil Research ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 493 ◽  
Author(s):  
GJ Churchman ◽  
PD Mcintosh ◽  
CM Burke ◽  
JS Whitton

The clay mineralogy of 12 soils (Dystrochrepts, a Eutrochrept, a Cryochrept and a Placaquept) formed in tuffaceous greywacke parent rocks is presented and discussed. In a New Zealand context, the soils are unusual because of their base-rich parent material which has been partly pre-weathered to smectite and kaolin minerals in geological time. Superimposed on this assemblage are the affects of present climate and soil drainage, which have altered smectite and vermiculite to dioctahedral (aluminous) chlorite. Conventional laboratory treatments cause dioctahedral chlorite to revert fully to smectite or vermiculite, or alternatively partially to interlayered hydrous mica. The labile nature of the interlayer Al is evident in high KCI-Al values. Allophane and gibbsite occur in acid upland soils that are also trace-element deficient. More intense leaching of upland soils with respect to lowland soils accounts for the upland soils' clay mineralogy and trace element deficiencies. The soils fall into three mineralogy classes of Soil Taxonomy and six classes of the proposed Whitton and Childs revision. The classes are not readily usable in the field, and subgroup or family distinctions based on simple chemical tests are suggested.

2019 ◽  
Vol 99 (4) ◽  
pp. 485-494
Author(s):  
Kolsum Rahman Salari ◽  
Mohammad Amir Delavar ◽  
Mehrdad Esfandiari ◽  
Ebrahim Pazira

There is limited information about the genesis, classification, and properties of calcareous and gypsiferous soils of western Iran. This study investigated the morphological, physical, and mineralogical characteristics of soils on different physiographic units, including plateau, colluvial fans, and piedmont plain in the Aleshtar region. The results indicated that the parent materials (calcareous and gypsiferous) as well as topographic conditions had the most influence on the soil profile development, pedogenic processes, and clay mineralogy. Illite, chlorite, smectite, palygorskite, and kaolinite clay minerals were identified using X-ray powder diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, and scanning electron microscopy. Illite, chlorite, and kaolinite have genetically been inherited from parent rocks. Neoformation of smectite and palygorskite other than genetic inheritance was formed as a result of calcite and gypsum precipitation and poor drainage. Calcareous soils with the petrocalcic horizon and gypsiferous soils contained more pedogenic palygorskite. In conclusion, we suggest adding a new great group of Gypsixerepts to the soil taxonomy to reflect the presence of pedogenic gypsum in Inceptisols.


Soil Research ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 69 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Senarath ◽  
A. S. Palmer ◽  
R. W. Tillman

Spatial variability of soil drainage, topsoil phosphate retention (P-retention), and clay mineralogy were investigated in soils on a Manawatu river terrace developed from a mixture of loamy tephra, loess, and quartzo-feldspathic alluvial parent material. The cause of short-distance variation in soil drainage was investigated on an area of 60 ha from the Last Glacial river aggradation terrace (200–240 m a.s.l.). Three small window areas of 7.5 ha were then selected for grid sampling at 50-m centres within each of 3 map units with contrasting drainage class. Each of the window areas was found to contain 3–4 different drainage classes. Topsoil P-retention also varied (from 20 to 84%) within the window areas. We found a close relationship between soil drainage, P-retention, and clay mineralogy. Well-drained soils have high P-retention and the clay fraction contains 12–13% allophane. Poorly drained soils have low P-retention and the clay fraction has no allophane and contains mainly Kandite (Kaolinite and Halloysite). The short-distance variability in drainage is attributed to slight textural variations of the original alluvial parent material. This gives rise to the formation of different soil structures, which in turn influence the soil hydraulic conductivity and thence variable drainage properties, which influence the clay mineralogy and P-retention.


Soil Research ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 177 ◽  
Author(s):  
RB Stewart ◽  
VE Neall ◽  
JA Pollok ◽  
JK Syers

The Egmont loam of Taranaki, New Zealand, is regarded as a classic andosol developed in andesitic tephra (a yellow-brown loam in the N.Z. genetic soil classification or an entic dystrandept in the US. Soil Taxonomy). Variations in grain size distribution and mineralogy within a representative profile show it to consist of two distinct units, an upper unit of andesitic tephra and a lower unit, containing up to 30% quartz, which is interpreted as a tephric loess. Correlation of peaks in andesitic glass distribution within the profile with eruptions from Mt Egmont suggest an accumulation period of circa 10000 years for the tephra unit, while the presence, in places conducive to its preservation, of the Aokautere Ash, a rhyolitic ash of widespread distribution in the Central North Island, dates (NZ1056A) the base of the profile at less than 19 850 � 310 years B.P. Peaks in distribution of the minor rhyolitic glass component in the tephra unit are correlated with three major post-glacial rhyolitic eruptions from the Central North Island; the Taupo eruption of 1840 � 50 years B.P. (NZ1548A), the Waimihia eruption of 3440 � 70 years B.P. (NZZA), and the Rotoma eruption of 7330 � 235 years B.P. (NZ1199A). Variations in the rate of quartz accumulation in the silt fraction of the Egmont profile are correlated with climatic changes, a higher rate of quartz accumulation occurring during the colder climate of the last stadial, in contrast with a lower rate of quartz accumulation occurring during the warmer climate of post-glacial time.


Author(s):  
Anthony S. R. Juo ◽  
Kathrin Franzluebbers

In the natural world, plant species evolve and adapt to specific soil and climatic conditions. The productivity and stability of a natural soil-plant continuum or ecosystem are maintained through diversity, succession, and internal nutrient cycling. Hence, there are no rich soils or poor soils but different soils supporting different ecosystems. From an agricultural viewpoint, however, the term soil fertility may be defined as the capacity of a soil, under a given rainfall or water management regime, to support the growth of common food and fiber crops with minimum or no external inputs for a long period of time without adversely degrading the chemical, physical, and biological properties of the soil. Thus, a naturally fertile or productive soil usually possesses the following features: • good soil tilth or workability • adequate organic matter content in the surface layer • adequate permeability • adequate available water-holding capacity • slightly acidic to neutral pH • loamy-textured topsoil • moderate amounts of smectite and weatherable minerals Worldwide, the most fertile soils are prairie soils derived from glacial till, young alluvial soils in river valleys and deltas and high-base-status volcanic ash soils. These soils are also known as Mollisols, high-base-status Entisols and high-base- status Andisols, respectively, according to the Soil Taxonomy classification. At the other end of the scale are the so-called infertile soils. These are the highly weathered and strongly leached soils or “lateritic soils” of the tropics. Ultisols and Oxisols rich in kaolinite and Fe and Al oxides fall into this category. The soil fertility status of other types of soils falls in between these two groups. In general, parent material and stage of weathering are good indicators of soil fertility. Moderately weathered soils derived from basic parent rocks such as basalts and limestone and recent alluvial deposits are invariably more fertile than those derived from acidic parent rocks such as sandstone, quartzite, and coarse-grained granite. Strongly weathered soils generally have a low fertility because primary minerals containing plant nutrients such as Ca, Mg, and K have long disappeared through dissolution, acidification, and leaching. The dominant clay-size minerals in strongly weathered soils, kaolinite and Fe and Al oxides, possess little capacity to retain these cations.


2011 ◽  
Vol 91 (4) ◽  
pp. 563-578 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lesley Dampier ◽  
Paul Sanborn ◽  
Scott Smith ◽  
Jeffrey Bond ◽  
John Clague

Dampier, L., Sanborn, P., Smith, S., Bond, J. and Clague, J. J. 2011. Genesis of upland soils, Lewes Plateau, central Yukon. Part 1: soils formed on Pleistocene glacial deposits. Can. J. Soil Sci. 91: 563–578. We describe and interpret nine upland (>1000 m asl) Dystric Brunisols and one Humo-Ferric Podzol formed on till of the McConnell [Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 2] and penultimate (MIS 4 or 6) glaciations on the Lewes Plateau of central Yukon Territory. Unlike soils formed on correlative glacial deposits at lower elevation in the nearby Tintina Trench, the soils on the Lewes Plateau display only weak age-related differences. Penultimate and McConnell soils have solum thicknesses of 50–75 cm and <50 cm, respectively, but other morphological and chemical properties do not differ between the two age groups. Smectite is present in the McConnell soils; it was previously reported only in soils formed on Early Pleistocene glacial deposits in central Yukon and was interpreted to reflect weathering and soil formation during warm interglaciations. Paleoclimatic interpretations of clay mineralogy in central Yukon may be confounded by differences in parent material provenance and should be reassessed. This study shows that field soil characteristics alone are insufficient to differentiate McConnell and penultimate glacial deposits in upland landscape positions on the Lewes Plateau.


Clay Minerals ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 137-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. E. G. R. Schaefer ◽  
J. D. Fabris ◽  
J. C. Ker

AbstractThis review focuses on the clay mineralogy of the most important Brazilian soils: the Latosols, which cover >60% of the country by area, and occur in association with other soils. They are typically deep, highly-weathered soils, dominated by low-activity 1:1 clay minerals and Fe and Al oxyhydroxides, with varying proportions of these minerals, depending on parent material and weathering intensity. They are usually of low fertility, although eutric types also occur. Latosols are generally correlated with Oxisols (American soil taxonomy) and Ferralsols (WRB system). Clay mineralogy is typically monotonous: kaolinite, gibbsite, hematite, goethite, maghemite and Ti minerals (mainly ilmenite and anatase) are the prominent mineral phases in the clay fraction. Some Latosols developing on basalt from southern Brazil contain significant amounts of hydroxyl-interlayed vermiculite. Among the pedogenic oxides the most frequent are goethite (α-FeOOH), indicated by yellowish colours (2.5Y–10YR; in the absence of hematite), and hematite (α-Fe2O3), which imbues reddish colors (2.5YR–5R), even when present in very minor amounts. Maghemite (γ-Fe2O3) is less frequent; it imparts a reddish-brown colour (5YR–2.5YR) and magnetic properties. Both goethite and hematite show Al-substitution, with a greater relative proportion in soil goethites. Hence, in similar drainage conditions, goethite is less prone to dissolution than hematite. Most reddish Latosols also contain maghemite, due to partial or complete oxidation of magnetite, which generally occurs naturally or is fire-induced. Magnetite and/or maghemite are associated with trace elements which are important in plant nutrition, such as Cu, Zn and Co. The contents of gibbsite in Latosols are extremely variable, from a complete absence in brown Latosols, to 54% in red Latosols from mafic rocks. Relatively large amounts of gibbsite are found in the clay fraction of these soils and this mineral is important in P sorption in deeply weathered Latosols in association with goethite and hematite. Even though most Latosols are dystrophic, some are eutrophic, revealing an unusually large base saturation in areas under ustic regimes where the parent material is particularly rich in bases, such as basalts. This eutrophic nature is attributed to the protecting role of micro-aggregates in ferric red Latosols, which retard baseleaching from the inner aggregate. At the other extreme, some Brazilian Latosols are acric and positively-charged in sub-surface horizons, as revealed by the relationship pH KCl > pH H2O. These acric Latosols are the result of long-term weathering and intensive leaching, during which pH tends to increase to values close to the zero point charge of Fe and Al oxides (between 6 and 7), greatly increasing P adsorption, which is mainly attributed to gibbsite, goethite and hematite. Soil kaolinites in Brazilian Latosols are mostly of low crystallinity, with Hughes and Brown indexes of between 6 and 15. In this review we have discussed the role of these clay-fraction minerals in soil genesis and fertility, highlighting the marked role of inheritance from deeply-weathered parent material. Latosols typically retain large amounts of Fe oxides, some of which are magnetic, with spontaneous magnetization >1 J T–1 kg–1. In this regard, reddish Latosols developed from mafic rocks are the most representative magnetic soils, and cover as much as 3.9% of Brazil. An overview of magnetic soils on four representative examples of mafic lithologies is presented, together with some aspects of their Fe-oxide mineralogy and related field and laboratory technqiues.


Soil Research ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 115 ◽  
Author(s):  
MD Laffan ◽  
BK Daly ◽  
JS Whitton

Eight soil profiles ranging in altitude from 30 m to 820 m at Tennyson Inlet in the Marlborough Sounds, New Zealand, are described, classified and discussed in terms of morphology, chemistry and clay mineralogy. The soils are formed from greywacke on forested hilly and steep land under a superhumid climate. Profiles show eluvial and/or illuvial features typical of podzols and podzolized soils. Within the study morphological, chemical and mineralogical properties show patterns in weathering, leaching and podzolization. Differences in weathering are related mainly to geomorphic history and topography. The most strongly weathered soils occur at altitudes below about 200 m where parent materials were probably inherited from Late Pleistocene interglacial or interstadial weathering. Less weathered soils occur at higher altitudes where parent materials were derived from widespread periglacial erosion during the last glaciation, and from periodic erosion during the Holocene. Weathering and also leaching is least on soils on very steep slopes (>38�) at altitudes above 200 m, where rejuvenation by slope movement has been more active than on less steep slopes. Patterns in weathering are clearly shown by clay mineralogy, with strongly weathered soils dominated by kaolinite, and less weathered soils dominated by vermiculite. Differences in podzolization are attributed mainly to greater effective rainfall, leaching and accumulation of amorphous minerals and mineral-organic complexes with increasing altitude. The combination of field and laboratory data shows that at altitudes below about 200-300 m profiles are relatively weakly podzolized, while podzolized soils and podzols occur at higher altitudes. Podzolization patterns are clearly shown by subsoil values of acid-oxalate and pyrophosphate Fe and Al, NaF, pH and P retention. The profile at highest altitude is dominated by smectite clays and the greyish-coloured solum is interpreted mainly as a relatively thick (80 cm) eluvial horizon resting directly on bedrock. Neither the New Zealand Genetic Classification nor Soil Taxonomy satisfactorily classifies all the soils.


2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 42
Author(s):  
Adewole John Adeola ◽  
Emmanuel Tamunobelema Tubonemi

Residual clays and laterite of economic values often occur within weathering profiles above basement rocks in tropical regions due to supergene enrichment and leaching of liable components. Previous studies in Ore area mainly on geochemistry of the basement rocks with scanty information on the weathered profiles. This study was carried out to determine the compositional characteristics of the basement rocks, the geochemical trends within the profiles above the parent rocks and the evaluation of their economic potentials.Petrographic study was carried out on thin sections of the rock samples. Elemental compositions of the rocks, clay, laterite, and top-soil were determined using Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometer (ICP-MS). Clay mineralogy was determined using X-ray Diffraction (XRD) analysis. Chemical index of Alterations (CIA) was calculated from geochemical data.Weathering of granite and banded gneiss in Ore resulted in the formation of soil layer, which ranged 0-0.5m, laterite 1.2-3m and clayey zone 2.9-3.0m. Quartz, plagioclase feldspars, microcline, biotite and hornblende were the essential minerals in the parent rocks. Granite and banded gneiss is high SiO2 (>65%) but low in MgO (<2.0%) and CaO (<4.0%). Kaolinite (60-80%), goethite (3-12%) and microcline (4-10%) were the dominant minerals in the XRD of the weathering profiles. Traces of illite were present only in granite. The CIA was generally > 85 indicating advanced state of weathering producing lateritic soil. The lateritic profiles over granite and banded gneiss of Ore area varied with the composition of the parent rocks. The clay layer has economic potential for ceramics, fertilizer and structural wares.


1983 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 555-559 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.L. Parfitt ◽  
C.W. Childs
Keyword(s):  

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